News
        
        Microsoft Pushing Licensing Clarity for Key Patents
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - February 09, 2012
 
		
        
		In the midst of an especially litigious period in the mobile space, Microsoft is issuing a call for greater fairness and clarity in licensing.
Microsoft published a statement on Wednesday  regarding so-called  "standard essential patents," or patents that standards bodies have   deemed important. The statement pushes for greater licensing clarity for such patents based on "fair, reasonable  and nondiscriminatory" (FRAND) terms.
Microsoft has faced legal challenges from companies that hold  intellectual property important for mobile products using  standards-based technologies. The company has also  has sued many of its  own mobile hardware partners over mobile user interface technologies,  especially if those partners are using the Linux-based Android mobile OS.
FRAND, along with its linguistic cognate, RAND  (which drops the "fair" part but bears the same meaning), is  typically licensing language that's targeted as part of standards body  formulations. The idea is that if a standard requires the use of certain  patented technologies, companies can afford to pay for the royalty costs and still  compete in the market. However, it's worth noting that these terms are rejected by the  Free Software Foundation because they imply that costs must be associated  with software use. Instead, the FSF prefers the use of the phrase  "uniform fee only" to describe FRAND and RAND licensing. Given the  context of recent squabbles over standards essential patents, the FSF's  definition may be the most accurate one.
 The Motorola Problem
  The nature of those FRAND royalty costs may have prompted  Microsoft's latest statement on the matter. Microsoft appears to be trying to  shape how high-tech industries license intellectual properties that are used in  specifications set by standards bodies. However, the timing of Microsoft's  statement also coincides with regulatory authorities' reviews of Google's  attempt to buy Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. (MMI). 
 
It turns out that Motorola has been giving both Microsoft  and Apple a hard time over FRAND licensing. Google's attempts to purchase MMI  may amount to further heartburn for Microsoft's and Apple's legal departments  since Google could maintain Motorola's stance with respect to FRAND licensing, potentially  affecting the costs of both companies' mobile products. 
 Some of these FRAND difficulties have made the news. For  instance, Microsoft sued Motorola in  November  2010 for charging excessive royalty payments for wireless LAN  and H.264 video codec technologies that Microsoft uses in its Xbox gaming  console. The technologies are associated with IEEE and ITU standards, and so  the licensing should be offered according to RAND  principles. Microsoft has elaborated on that FRAND licensing, saying that the royalty  payments should have been determined at the component price level, rather than at  the cost of the whole device (Motorola's position). 
 
Apple, too, has been complaining about FRAND licensing. The  company was initially blocked from selling its iPad and iPhone devices in  German stores because Motorola wanted payment on patents associated with the  General Packet Radio Service standard, according to a  report. Apple recently sent a letter to the European Telecommunications  Standards Institute (ETSI) complaining about mobile device patents and royalty  rates, and asking for a more consistent FRAND licensing scheme, according to an article published  by The Wall Street Journal. The  article suggested that Motorola had demanded 2.25 percent of Apple's iPhone  device sales for the FRAND licensing.
 Google on FRAND
  Google has explained that it will follow some of Motorola's  specific policies on FRAND licensing once it acquires MMI. In response to a  question, a company spokesperson simply stated that it would license  intellectual property based on FRAND terms. 
 "Since we announced our agreement to acquire Motorola  Mobility last August, we've heard questions about whether Motorola Mobility's  standard-essential patents will continue to be licensed on FRAND terms once we've  closed this transaction. The answer is simple: they will," a Google  spokesperson stated via e-mail on Wednesday. 
 However, Google's letter to the IEEE, dated Feb. 8, 2012, is  more specific. It indicates that the company will continue Motorola's policy  and grant licenses based on "a maximum per-unit royalty of 2.25% of the  net selling price for the relevant end product on a go-forward basis, subject  to offsets for the value of any cross-licenses or other consideration received  from the licensee." The letter also indicated that Google won't impose  injunctive relief "against a willing licensee."
 Google's letter is reproduced at Florian Müller's blog, which also  houses documents from Apple and Cisco on "FRAND abuse." Müller is a  non-lawyer consultant who currently has a contract with Microsoft to produce a  study on FRAND licensing. He backs Microsoft's position on FRAND and claims to  support open source licensing, too.
 In any case, it looks like Google may be moving into a  position in which it could wreak some financial payback. The Android OS, largely fostered by Google and  offered royalty-free to hardware manufacturers, has been the subject of  numerous patent infringement claims from both Apple and Microsoft. It's  calculated that Microsoft may make more money off Android royalty payments than  it does selling its own competing Windows Phone OS. Should Google get a hold of  MMI's intellectual property, Microsoft's and Apple's costs could rise.
 Microsoft's Position
  Here is Microsoft's declaration on how FRAND principles  should be applied to intellectual property associated with standards-based  technologies:
 
  - "Microsoft will always adhere to       the promises it has made to standards organizations to make its standard       essential patents available on fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory       terms."
 
  - "This means that Microsoft will       not seek an injunction or exclusion order against any firm on the basis of       those essential patents." 
 
  - "This also means that Microsoft       will make those essential patents available for license to other firms       without requiring that those firms license their patents back to       Microsoft, except for any patents they have that are essential to the same       industry standard." 
 
  - "Microsoft will not transfer those       standard essential patents to any other firm unless that firm agrees to       adhere to the points outlined above."
 
Microsoft's position, in a corporate framework, does sound  reasonable. It has even taken  its position to regulators around the world, insisting on RAND  terms for intellectual property holders when patents touch standards. It really  should be that companies rallying around standards shouldn't let FRAND  licensing become an obstacle to producing products. 
 
However, the litigious mobile space seems to be breaking  apart the notion of such "gentleman agreements." At this point, the  milieu seems to be all about legal positioning to grab the most mobile  revenues, while leveraging very useful standards in products. It may be that  Microsoft's litigation outside the FRAND standards licensing scheme has set the  tone, and upped the costs, especially for companies making mobile products.