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Reasonable and non-discriminatory licensing

Reasonable and non-discriminatory (RAND) terms, also known as fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms, denote a voluntary licensing commitment that standards organizations often request from the owner of an intellectual property right (usually a patent) that is, or may become, essential to practice a technical standard.[1] Put differently, a F/RAND commitment is a voluntary agreement between the standard-setting organization and the holder of standard-essential patents. U.S. courts, as well as courts in other jurisdictions, have found that, in appropriate circumstances, the implementer of a standard—that is, a firm or entity that uses a standard to render a service or manufacture a product—is an intended third-party beneficiary of the FRAND agreement, and, as such, is entitled to certain rights conferred by that agreement.[2]

A standard-setting organization is an industry group that sets common standards for its particular industry to ensure compatibility and interoperability of devices manufactured by different companies.[3] A patent becomes standard-essential when a standard-setting organization sets a standard that adopts the technology that the patent covers.

Because a patent, under most countries' legal regimes, grants its owner an exclusive right to exclude others from making, using, selling, or importing the invention, a standard-setting organization generally must obtain permission from the patent holder to include a patented technology in its standard. So, it will often request that a patent holder clarify its willingness to offer to license its standard-essential patents on FRAND terms. If the patent holder refuses upon request to license a patent that has become essential to a standard, then the standard-setting organization must exclude that technology. When viewed in this light, the FRAND commitment serves to harmonize the private interests of patent holders and the public interests of standard-setting organizations. Many scholars have written about these topics, as well as a variety of other legal and economic issues concerning licensing on F/RAND terms.[4]

F/RAND as a contract edit

Standard-setting organizations commonly adopt policies that govern the ownership of patent rights that apply to the standards they adopt (the patent policy). In the United States, the patent holder's agreement to adhere by the patent policy creates a legally binding contract, as the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled in Microsoft v. Motorola. One of the most common policies is to require a patent holder that voluntarily agrees to include its patented technology in the standard to license that technology on "reasonable and non-discriminatory terms" (RAND) or on "fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms" (FRAND). The two terms are generally interchangeable; FRAND seems to be preferred in Europe and RAND in the U.S.[1]

Some commentators argue that standard-setting organizations include the FRAND obligation in their bylaws primarily as a means of enhancing the pro-competitive character of their industry. They are intended to prevent members from engaging in licensing abuse based on the monopolistic advantage generated as a result of having their intellectual property rights (IPR) included in the industry standards. Once an organization is offering a FRAND license they are required to offer that license to anyone (wishing to access the standard), not necessarily only members of the organization.[1][5] Without such commitment, members could use monopoly power inherent in a standard to impose unfair, unreasonable and discriminatory licensing terms that would damage competition and inflate their own relative position.

On the other hand, commentators stress that the FRAND commitment also serves to ensure that the holder of a patent that becomes essential to the standard will receive royalties from users of the standard that adequately compensate the patent holder for the incremental value that its technology contributes to the standard.[6] The development of a patented technology typically requires significant investment in research, and contributing that technology to a standard is not the only option by which a patent holder can recoup that investment and thus monetize its invention. For example, a patent holder has the option to monetize that invention through exclusive use or exclusive licensing. Technology owners might have insufficient incentives to contribute their technologies to a standard-setting organization without the promise of an adequate royalty. The promise of a F/RAND royalty address that problem: the patent holder will typically agree to contribute its technology to the standard, thus forgoing the exclusive use or the exclusive licensing of its technology, in exchange for the assurance that it will receive adequate compensation in reasonable royalties.[7]

In 2013, court decisions and scholarly articles cited FRAND commitments 10 times more often than in 2003.[8]

Definitions edit

While there are no legal precedents to spell out specifically what the actual terms mean, it can be interpreted from the testimony of people like Professor Mark Lemley from Stanford University, in front of the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary that the individual terms are defined as follows:[citation needed]

Fair relates mainly to the underlying licensing terms. Drawing from anti-trust/competition law; fair terms means terms which are not anti-competitive and that would not be considered unlawful if imposed by a dominant firm in their relative market. Examples of terms that would breach this commitment are: requiring licensees to buy licenses for products that they do not want in order to get a license for the products they do want or requiring licensees to take licenses to certain unwanted or unneeded patents to obtain licenses to other desired patents (bundling); requiring licensees to license their own IP to the licensor for free (free grant backs); and including restrictive conditions on licensees' dealings with competitors (mandatory exclusivity).[citation needed]

Reasonable refers mainly to the licensing rates. According to some, a reasonable licensing rate is a rate charged on licenses which would not result in an unreasonable aggregate rate if all licensees were charged a similar rate. According to this view, aggregate rates that would significantly increase the cost to the industry and make the industry uncompetitive are unreasonable. Similarly, a reasonable licensing rate must reward the licensor with adequate compensation for contributing its essential patents to a standard. Compensation is adequate if it provides the licensor with the incentive to continue investing and contributing to the standard in future time periods.[9] A licensor which has several different licensing packages might be tempted to have both reasonable and unreasonable packages. However having a reasonable "bundled" rate does not excuse having unreasonable licensing rates for smaller unbundled packages. All licensing rates must be reasonable.

Non-discriminatory relates to both the terms and the rates included in licensing agreements. As the name suggests this commitment requires that licensors treat each individual licensee in a similar manner. This does not mean that the rates and payment terms cannot change dependent on the volume and creditworthiness of the licensee. However it does mean that the underlying licensing condition included in a licensing agreement must be the same regardless of the licensee. This obligation is included in order to maintain a level playing field with respect to existing competitors and to ensure that potential new entrants are free to enter the market on the same basis.

The most controversial issue in RAND licensing is whether the "reasonable" license price should include the value contributed by the standard-setting organization's decision to adopt the standard. A technology is often more valuable after it has been widely adopted than when it is one alternative among many; there is a good argument that a license price that captures that additional value is not "reasonable" because it does not reflect the intrinsic value of the technology being licensed. On the other hand, the adoption of the standard may signal that the adopted technology is valuable, and the patent holder should be rewarded accordingly. That is particularly relevant when the value of the patent is not clearly known before the adoption of the standard.[10]

Some interpretations of "non-discriminatory" can include time-oriented licensing terms such as an "early bird" license offered by a licensor where terms of a RAND license are better for initial licensees or for licensees who sign a license within the first year of its availability.

Excluding costless distribution schemes edit

RAND terms exclude intangible goods which the producer may decide to distribute at no cost and where third parties may make further copies. Take for example a software package that is distributed at no cost and to which the developer wants to add support for a video format which requires a patent licence. If there is a licence which requires a tiny per-copy fee, the software project will not be able to avail of the licence. The licence may be called "(F)RAND", but the modalities discriminate against a whole category of intangible goods such as free software[11] and freeware.[12]

This form of discrimination can be similarly caused by common licence terms such as only applying to complete implementations of the licensed standard, limiting use to particular fields, or restricting redistribution. The Free Software Foundation suggests the term "uniform fee only" (UFO) to reflect that such "(F)RAND" licenses are inherently discriminatory.[13]

Related licenses edit

Related to RAND licenses are RAND-Z (RAND with zero royalty) or RAND-RF (RAND Royalty Free) licensing, in which a company promises to license the technology at no charge, but implementers still have to get the licenser's permission to implement. The licenser may not make money off the deal but can still stop some type of products or require some type of reciprocity or do more subtle things like drag out the licensing process.[14][15][16]

Negotiating process edit

The negotiating process for FRAND licenses places requirements on the patent owner and the envisioned patentee. The terms for these negotiations were set in German case law in a case regarding the Orange-Book-Standard, and these terms are often used in licensing negotiations. In 2015, the European Court of Justice interpreted FRAND licensing terms in case Huawei v ZTE (C170/13, ECLI:EU:C:2015:477 significantly diverging from the Orange-Book-Standard.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Layne-Farrar, Anne; Padilla, A. Jorge; Schmalensee, Richard (2007). "Pricing Patents for Licensing in Standard-Setting Organizations: Making Sense of FRAND Commitments". Antitrust Law Journal. 74: 671.
  2. ^ Microsoft Corp. v. Motorola, Inc., 696 F.3d 872, 884 (9th Cir. 2012); In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC Patent Litig., MDL No. 2303, 2013 WL 5593609, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 3, 2013).
  3. ^ "ICT Standards, standardization, GSM, TETRA, NFV, GPRS, 3GPP, ITS, UMTS, UTRAN, M2M, MEC, Mobile, IoT, Security, standardisation". ETSI. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  4. ^ J. Gregory Sidak, A FRAND Contract's Intended Third-Party Beneficiary, 69 FLA. L. REV., https://www.criterioneconomics.com/a-frand-contracts-intended-third-party-beneficiary.html; Thomas F. Cotter, Comparative Law and Economics of Standard-Essential Patents and FRAND Royalties, 22 TEX. INTELL. PROP. L.J. 311 (2013); Mark A. Lemley & Carl Shapiro, A Simple Approach to Setting Reasonable Royalties for Standard-Essential Patents, 28 BERKELEY TECH. L.J. 1135 (2013); Tim W. Dornis, J. EUR. COMP. L. & PRACT. 11 (2020), 575 ff.
  5. ^ Salant, David J (2007). "Formulas for fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory royalty determination". Munich Personal RePEc Archive. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  6. ^ J. Gregory Sidak, Apportionment, FRAND Royalties, and Comparable Licenses After Ericsson v. D-Link, 2016 U. ILL. L. REV. (forthcoming), https://www.criterioneconomics.com/apportionment-frand-royalties-comparable-licenses-ericsson-dlink.html.
  7. ^ Memorandum from J. Gregory Sidak, Chairman, Criterion Economics LLC to the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion of India (Mar. 30, 2016), https://www.criterioneconomics.com/standard-essential-patents-indian-ministry-commerce-industry.html.
  8. ^ "" FRAND ": statistical comparison between cases and research papers". Concurrentialiste Review (in French). January 27, 2014. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  9. ^ J. Gregory Sidak, The Meaning of FRAND, Part I: Royalties, 9 J. COMPETITION L. & ECON. 931, 989–90 (2013), available at http://www.criterioneconomics.com/meaning-of-frand-royalties-for-standard-essential-patents.html
  10. ^ Mariniello, Mario (2011) Fair, Reasonable and Non Discriminatory (FRAND) Terms: A Challenge for Competition Authorities - Journal of Competition Law and Economics, Oxford University Press, Vol. 7, n. 3; Tim W. Dornis, J. EUR. COMP. L. & PRACT. 11 (2020), 575 ff.
  11. ^ "FRAND" is a FRAUD Free Software Foundation, 2012
  12. ^ "FRAND". End Software Patents. Retrieved October 9, 2016.
  13. ^ Words to Avoid gnu.org
  14. ^ "A Buyer's Guide to Standards". September 20, 2002. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  15. ^ "Patent Licensing Assurances in Standards Organizations". August 6, 2007. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  16. ^ Standardization Feedback for the National Science and Technology Council (PDF), retrieved May 23, 2011
  17. ^ "The European Court of Justice on enforcement of FRAND patents: Huawei v. ZTE". Lexology. Retrieved August 4, 2015.; Tim W. Dornis, J. EUR. COMP. L. & PRACT. 11 (2020), 575 ff.

External links edit

  • Pat Treacy and Sophie Lawrance, "[1]", for late 2020 developments in the FRAND landscape in Europe
  • Pat Treacy and Sophie Lawrance, "", Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice, 2007, doi:10.1093/jiplp/jpm212
  • 3G Patents Ltd, the licensing body for WCDMA patents
  • Current Patent Practice, a W3C Note dated 24 January 2002
  • "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About FRAND (But didn't know who to ask)" by Andy Updegrove, dated 26 February 2012
  • Tom H. Chia, "Fighting the Smartphone Patent War with RAND-Encumbered Patents", Berkeley Technology Law Journal, Vol. 12, Annual Review, pages 209–240, 2012.
  • Schaumberg, Tom M.; Emi Ito Ortiz (February 25, 2013). "Why Can't They Be FRANDs? Concerns About The International Trade Commission (ITC's) Approach to Standard-Essential Patent Cases Are Unwarranted". The National Law Review. ISSN 2161-3362. Retrieved March 3, 2013.

reasonable, discriminatory, licensing, reasonable, discriminatory, rand, terms, also, known, fair, reasonable, discriminatory, frand, terms, denote, voluntary, licensing, commitment, that, standards, organizations, often, request, from, owner, intellectual, pr. Reasonable and non discriminatory RAND terms also known as fair reasonable and non discriminatory FRAND terms denote a voluntary licensing commitment that standards organizations often request from the owner of an intellectual property right usually a patent that is or may become essential to practice a technical standard 1 Put differently a F RAND commitment is a voluntary agreement between the standard setting organization and the holder of standard essential patents U S courts as well as courts in other jurisdictions have found that in appropriate circumstances the implementer of a standard that is a firm or entity that uses a standard to render a service or manufacture a product is an intended third party beneficiary of the FRAND agreement and as such is entitled to certain rights conferred by that agreement 2 A standard setting organization is an industry group that sets common standards for its particular industry to ensure compatibility and interoperability of devices manufactured by different companies 3 A patent becomes standard essential when a standard setting organization sets a standard that adopts the technology that the patent covers Because a patent under most countries legal regimes grants its owner an exclusive right to exclude others from making using selling or importing the invention a standard setting organization generally must obtain permission from the patent holder to include a patented technology in its standard So it will often request that a patent holder clarify its willingness to offer to license its standard essential patents on FRAND terms If the patent holder refuses upon request to license a patent that has become essential to a standard then the standard setting organization must exclude that technology When viewed in this light the FRAND commitment serves to harmonize the private interests of patent holders and the public interests of standard setting organizations Many scholars have written about these topics as well as a variety of other legal and economic issues concerning licensing on F RAND terms 4 Contents 1 F RAND as a contract 2 Definitions 3 Excluding costless distribution schemes 4 Related licenses 5 Negotiating process 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksF RAND as a contract editStandard setting organizations commonly adopt policies that govern the ownership of patent rights that apply to the standards they adopt the patent policy In the United States the patent holder s agreement to adhere by the patent policy creates a legally binding contract as the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled in Microsoft v Motorola One of the most common policies is to require a patent holder that voluntarily agrees to include its patented technology in the standard to license that technology on reasonable and non discriminatory terms RAND or on fair reasonable and non discriminatory terms FRAND The two terms are generally interchangeable FRAND seems to be preferred in Europe and RAND in the U S 1 Some commentators argue that standard setting organizations include the FRAND obligation in their bylaws primarily as a means of enhancing the pro competitive character of their industry They are intended to prevent members from engaging in licensing abuse based on the monopolistic advantage generated as a result of having their intellectual property rights IPR included in the industry standards Once an organization is offering a FRAND license they are required to offer that license to anyone wishing to access the standard not necessarily only members of the organization 1 5 Without such commitment members could use monopoly power inherent in a standard to impose unfair unreasonable and discriminatory licensing terms that would damage competition and inflate their own relative position On the other hand commentators stress that the FRAND commitment also serves to ensure that the holder of a patent that becomes essential to the standard will receive royalties from users of the standard that adequately compensate the patent holder for the incremental value that its technology contributes to the standard 6 The development of a patented technology typically requires significant investment in research and contributing that technology to a standard is not the only option by which a patent holder can recoup that investment and thus monetize its invention For example a patent holder has the option to monetize that invention through exclusive use or exclusive licensing Technology owners might have insufficient incentives to contribute their technologies to a standard setting organization without the promise of an adequate royalty The promise of a F RAND royalty address that problem the patent holder will typically agree to contribute its technology to the standard thus forgoing the exclusive use or the exclusive licensing of its technology in exchange for the assurance that it will receive adequate compensation in reasonable royalties 7 In 2013 court decisions and scholarly articles cited FRAND commitments 10 times more often than in 2003 8 Definitions editWhile there are no legal precedents to spell out specifically what the actual terms mean it can be interpreted from the testimony of people like Professor Mark Lemley from Stanford University in front of the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary that the individual terms are defined as follows citation needed Fair relates mainly to the underlying licensing terms Drawing from anti trust competition law fair terms means terms which are not anti competitive and that would not be considered unlawful if imposed by a dominant firm in their relative market Examples of terms that would breach this commitment are requiring licensees to buy licenses for products that they do not want in order to get a license for the products they do want or requiring licensees to take licenses to certain unwanted or unneeded patents to obtain licenses to other desired patents bundling requiring licensees to license their own IP to the licensor for free free grant backs and including restrictive conditions on licensees dealings with competitors mandatory exclusivity citation needed Reasonable refers mainly to the licensing rates According to some a reasonable licensing rate is a rate charged on licenses which would not result in an unreasonable aggregate rate if all licensees were charged a similar rate According to this view aggregate rates that would significantly increase the cost to the industry and make the industry uncompetitive are unreasonable Similarly a reasonable licensing rate must reward the licensor with adequate compensation for contributing its essential patents to a standard Compensation is adequate if it provides the licensor with the incentive to continue investing and contributing to the standard in future time periods 9 A licensor which has several different licensing packages might be tempted to have both reasonable and unreasonable packages However having a reasonable bundled rate does not excuse having unreasonable licensing rates for smaller unbundled packages All licensing rates must be reasonable Non discriminatory relates to both the terms and the rates included in licensing agreements As the name suggests this commitment requires that licensors treat each individual licensee in a similar manner This does not mean that the rates and payment terms cannot change dependent on the volume and creditworthiness of the licensee However it does mean that the underlying licensing condition included in a licensing agreement must be the same regardless of the licensee This obligation is included in order to maintain a level playing field with respect to existing competitors and to ensure that potential new entrants are free to enter the market on the same basis The most controversial issue in RAND licensing is whether the reasonable license price should include the value contributed by the standard setting organization s decision to adopt the standard A technology is often more valuable after it has been widely adopted than when it is one alternative among many there is a good argument that a license price that captures that additional value is not reasonable because it does not reflect the intrinsic value of the technology being licensed On the other hand the adoption of the standard may signal that the adopted technology is valuable and the patent holder should be rewarded accordingly That is particularly relevant when the value of the patent is not clearly known before the adoption of the standard 10 Some interpretations of non discriminatory can include time oriented licensing terms such as an early bird license offered by a licensor where terms of a RAND license are better for initial licensees or for licensees who sign a license within the first year of its availability Excluding costless distribution schemes editRAND terms exclude intangible goods which the producer may decide to distribute at no cost and where third parties may make further copies Take for example a software package that is distributed at no cost and to which the developer wants to add support for a video format which requires a patent licence If there is a licence which requires a tiny per copy fee the software project will not be able to avail of the licence The licence may be called F RAND but the modalities discriminate against a whole category of intangible goods such as free software 11 and freeware 12 This form of discrimination can be similarly caused by common licence terms such as only applying to complete implementations of the licensed standard limiting use to particular fields or restricting redistribution The Free Software Foundation suggests the term uniform fee only UFO to reflect that such F RAND licenses are inherently discriminatory 13 Related licenses editRelated to RAND licenses are RAND Z RAND with zero royalty or RAND RF RAND Royalty Free licensing in which a company promises to license the technology at no charge but implementers still have to get the licenser s permission to implement The licenser may not make money off the deal but can still stop some type of products or require some type of reciprocity or do more subtle things like drag out the licensing process 14 15 16 Negotiating process editFurther information Orange Book Standard The negotiating process for FRAND licenses places requirements on the patent owner and the envisioned patentee The terms for these negotiations were set in German case law in a case regarding the Orange Book Standard and these terms are often used in licensing negotiations In 2015 the European Court of Justice interpreted FRAND licensing terms in case Huawei v ZTE C170 13 ECLI EU C 2015 477 significantly diverging from the Orange Book Standard 17 See also editEU lawReferences edit a b c Layne Farrar Anne Padilla A Jorge Schmalensee Richard 2007 Pricing Patents for Licensing in Standard Setting Organizations Making Sense of FRAND Commitments Antitrust Law Journal 74 671 Microsoft Corp v Motorola Inc 696 F 3d 872 884 9th Cir 2012 In re Innovatio IP Ventures LLC Patent Litig MDL No 2303 2013 WL 5593609 at 4 N D Ill Oct 3 2013 ICT Standards standardization GSM TETRA NFV GPRS 3GPP ITS UMTS UTRAN M2M MEC Mobile IoT Security standardisation ETSI Retrieved January 27 2019 J Gregory Sidak A FRAND Contract s Intended Third Party Beneficiary 69 FLA L REV https www criterioneconomics com a frand contracts intended third party beneficiary html Thomas F Cotter Comparative Law and Economics of Standard Essential Patents and FRAND Royalties 22 TEX INTELL PROP L J 311 2013 Mark A Lemley amp Carl Shapiro A Simple Approach to Setting Reasonable Royalties for Standard Essential Patents 28 BERKELEY TECH L J 1135 2013 Tim W Dornis J EUR COMP L amp PRACT 11 2020 575 ff Salant David J 2007 Formulas for fair reasonable and non discriminatory royalty determination Munich Personal RePEc Archive Retrieved December 11 2011 J Gregory Sidak Apportionment FRAND Royalties and Comparable Licenses After Ericsson v D Link 2016 U ILL L REV forthcoming https www criterioneconomics com apportionment frand royalties comparable licenses ericsson dlink html Memorandum from J Gregory Sidak Chairman Criterion Economics LLC to the Ministry of Commerce amp Industry Department of Industrial Policy amp Promotion of India Mar 30 2016 https www criterioneconomics com standard essential patents indian ministry commerce industry html FRAND statistical comparison between cases and research papers Concurrentialiste Review in French January 27 2014 Retrieved January 27 2019 J Gregory Sidak The Meaning of FRAND Part I Royalties 9 J COMPETITION L amp ECON 931 989 90 2013 available at http www criterioneconomics com meaning of frand royalties for standard essential patents html Mariniello Mario 2011 Fair Reasonable and Non Discriminatory FRAND Terms A Challenge for Competition Authorities Journal of Competition Law and Economics Oxford University Press Vol 7 n 3 Tim W Dornis J EUR COMP L amp PRACT 11 2020 575 ff FRAND is a FRAUD Free Software Foundation 2012 FRAND End Software Patents Retrieved October 9 2016 Words to Avoid gnu org A Buyer s Guide to Standards September 20 2002 Retrieved May 23 2011 Patent Licensing Assurances in Standards Organizations August 6 2007 Retrieved May 23 2011 Standardization Feedback for the National Science and Technology Council PDF retrieved May 23 2011 The European Court of Justice on enforcement of FRAND patents Huawei v ZTE Lexology Retrieved August 4 2015 Tim W Dornis J EUR COMP L amp PRACT 11 2020 575 ff External links editPat Treacy and Sophie Lawrance 1 for late 2020 developments in the FRAND landscape in Europe Pat Treacy and Sophie Lawrance FRANDly fire are industry standards doing more harm than good Journal of Intellectual Property Law amp Practice 2007 doi 10 1093 jiplp jpm212 3G Patents Ltd the licensing body for WCDMA patents Current Patent Practice a W3C Note dated 24 January 2002 Everything You Always Wanted to Know About FRAND But didn t know who to ask by Andy Updegrove dated 26 February 2012 Tom H Chia Fighting the Smartphone Patent War with RAND Encumbered Patents Berkeley Technology Law Journal Vol 12 Annual Review pages 209 240 2012 Schaumberg Tom M Emi Ito Ortiz February 25 2013 Why Can t They Be FRANDs Concerns About The International Trade Commission ITC s Approach to Standard Essential Patent Cases Are Unwarranted The National Law Review ISSN 2161 3362 Retrieved March 3 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reasonable and non discriminatory licensing amp oldid 1214828935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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