Top Banner
Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos [email protected]
21
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

Cross-Licensing

Technology AgreementsSpring 2005

Pete [email protected]

Page 2: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

2

Outline

Introduction Motivations Offense, Defense Negotiations Dangers Types of Licenses Benefits over Unilateral Licensing Limitation of Cross-Licensing Benefits

Page 3: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

3

Introduction

What is cross licensing? Businesses share patent rights

through licensing agreements so that they can use each others’ inventions

Page 4: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

4

Introduction

How does such a relationship begin?

I think this Patent is relevant Do not want to initially precipitate a

lawsuit If the other Party says no:

The only remedy is to file a lawsuit Intel v. Via: Before Intel filed the lawsuit,

Via did not come to the negotiating table

Page 5: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

5

Motivations to Cross License Litigation is Expensive

David v. Goliath Can a small company afford to litigate? Normal case cost $2-5Mn from start to end

of trial. Large case can cost $10Mn/quarter Dangers of Litigation

Patent might be held invalid (attacker) This can cripple your business

Judgment might be huge (target) Can put you out of business

Access to complementary patents

Page 6: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

6

Offense How strong is the patent?

Previously Litigated How easy is it to design around? Fundamental v. Improvement

A fundamental patent can be Blocking and is worth more money

Process Patents Cut across entire product lines

More valuable in negotiation Injunction – can put target out of

business

Page 7: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

7

Offense Everyone is licensing

“…interest in licensing our…patent is an important validation of the value this patent holds within the industry and of the technology we create…”

US courts (CAFC) more favorable to patent holders

Treble damages and attorneys’ fees for willful infringement

Do not want to risk injunction An injunction can shut down your business

Patents have become much more important to business (major assets)

Page 8: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

8

Defenses

Design Around If you can design around the patent you can

still make the product Value of the patent is only the cost of

designing around and implementing the design around

Legal Defenses Previous Art: if not disclosed at the time of

the patent, patent can be invalidated Pay less: the payment should be proportional

to chances of the patent not being invalidated and found to be infringing

Page 9: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

9

Negotiations

Look at accused products How many are sold? What is the prevailing party going to

get in damages if they win? Settle

Not prohibitively expensive As long as you are not out of market Margins might be thin

Can I still pay the fee and make money?

Page 10: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

10

Same Patent -> Different Result

Wang v. Msft Microsoft bought $84Mn of Wang

stock

Kodak v. Sun Kodak won on Patents bought from

Wang Sun paid Eastman Kodak $90Mn

Page 11: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

11

Dangers

Agere v. Atmel Agere sued Atmel on manufacturing

process patents (Bell Labs) Agere sued Atmel for $100Mn Agere had licensed these patents to

other companies Result?

Three patents were found invalid because previous work was not disclosed

Fourth patent was found non-infringing

Page 12: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

12

Types of Licenses

Fixed Cost – Straight Fee “paid up fee”, “fully paid fee”

Per Item Running Royalty per item: flat fee, % Volume discount Declining prices over time

Straight Cross License Very common in the 1980s-90s Broad cross license

Page 13: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

13

Benefits over Unilateral Licensing

Cross-license to reduce fee Might not be able to fully utilize

patent Monopoly deadweight loss

Use patent to barter with Cross-license results in future

collaborative relationship Complementary inventions

Page 14: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

14

Benefits over Unilateral Licensing

Added knowledge flow between cross-licensing parties for post-licensing innovations Cross-licensing is a forward-looking alliance,

not merely a barter of patents Duopoly profit attained through cross-

licensing can be greater than expected monopoly profit (both technologies) Firms prefer cross-licensing if they can

assure higher profit Allows for design freedom by leveraging

access to other firms’ technologies

Page 15: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

15

Benefits over Unilateral Licensing

Large companies want to avoid litigation when launching new products (Sony & Samsung) companies don't want to be surprised by

litigation for patent infringement of non-ground-breaking products

there may be too many patents to look at practically

to not pay any money, they have to be roughly equal in the harm they could do to each other

Page 16: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

16

Benefits over Unilateral Licensing

Technologies such as semiconductors are distributed among many firms A single merger or license is not likely to fulfill

all technological requirements for the industry participants

Firms need to have access to other firms’ technological assets through contract

Semiconductor patents are highly complementary

Cumulative Innovation Accelerated innovation Higher Appropriability Exchange of future innovation possibilities

Page 17: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

17

Intel v. Via

Intel sued Via over patents used in chipsets for Intel/AMD processors

Via countersued on patents used in P4

Settlement: Cross-license of Intel, Via patents Via pays royalties to Intel on some

products

Page 18: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

18

Benefits over Unilateral Licensing

Cross-licensing transforms the transaction into “mutual reliance relation”

Unilateral Licensing – Appropriability Problem Follow-up innovations and patents are captured

by the licensee against the intention of the original patent holder

Cross-Licensing Can mitigate hazards of appropriability problem A’s license to B is tied with B’s license to A Safeguarding mechanism for transfer of

knowledge

Page 19: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

19

Limitation of Cross-Licensing Benefit

Core patent has broad innovation potential Produces many follow-up innovations

Core technology has greater hazards Continuing innovation is a key asset for

the licensor and blocking innovation jeopardizes the competence

Companies are reluctant to license core technologies

Selective cross-licensing of non-core patents

Page 20: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

20

Conclusions

Cross license can bolster both companies’ patent portfolio Decrease risk of litigation Cumulative innovation

Complementary inventions Mitigate appropriability problem

Be reasonable Gambling to win big is a huge risk Everyone makes money => Everyone

wins

Page 21: Cross-Licensing Technology Agreements Spring 2005 Pete Perlegos pperlegos@scu.edu.

21

Questions/Comments