Google argues popular Apple patents are de facto standards essential
In a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee, Google asserts that popular patents held by companies like Apple should be considered de facto standards essential, arguing the ubiquitous inventions are just as important to consumers as certified essential properties.
In a breakdown of Google's letter and a response from Apple, All Things D reports that Google, and by proxy Motorola Mobility, are proposing the new argument in an ongoing patent litigation against Apple.
In Google's letter to the Judiciary Committee, General Counsel Kent Walker wrote:
Illustration from Apple's U.S. Patent No. 7,663,607 for a "Multipoint touchscreen" | Source: USPTO
Apple fired back with its own letter to the Committee on Wednesday written by the company's General Counsel Bruce Sewell.
"That a proprietary technology That a proprietary technology becomes quite popular does not transform it into a ?standard? subject to the same legal constraints as true standards,? Sewell wrote.
From Sewell's letter:
"There?s a big difference between technology that became popular because it was adopted as a standard and technology that became popular because consumers fell in love with it. In the case of the smartphone patent wars, the first makes a cellphone a cellphone and the second makes it an iPhone," All Things D's John Paczkowski writes. "One is a core technology, the other is experiential product differentiation."
The two companies are currently engaged in a fierce international court struggle over patents related to Google's Android and Apple's iOS mobile operating systems. Most recently a German court cleared Motorola's Xoom tablet of infringing Apple iPad patents.
In the U.S., the International Trade Commission is currently reviewing a recent decision that could see the ban of Apple products which infringe on a Motorola Wi-Fi patent. The implications of the review are severs as many iDevices could see sales stoppages in one of the world's largest wireless markets. Motorola first filed the grievance in 2010.
In a breakdown of Google's letter and a response from Apple, All Things D reports that Google, and by proxy Motorola Mobility, are proposing the new argument in an ongoing patent litigation against Apple.
In Google's letter to the Judiciary Committee, General Counsel Kent Walker wrote:
According to the publication, the Android maker is claiming popular patents that have become all but ubiquitous in the marketsplace should be considered "commercially essential" and are therefore just as vulnerable for abuse as certified standards essential patents. The examples of multitouch technology and slide-to-unlock innovations, both of which have been used by Apple as leverage in patent dispute cases in the past, fall under the commercially essential category.While collaborative [Standards Setting Organizations (SSOs)] play an important part in the overall standard setting system, and are particularly prominent in industries such as telecommunications, they are not the only source of standards. Indeed, many of the same interoperability benefits that the FTC and others have touted in the SSO context also occur when one firm publishes information about an otherwise proprietary standard and other firms then independently decide (whether by choice or of necessity) to make complementary investments to support that standard in their products. ? Because proprietary or de facto standards can have just as important effects on consumer welfare, the Committee?s concern regarding the abuse of SEPs should encompass them as well.
Illustration from Apple's U.S. Patent No. 7,663,607 for a "Multipoint touchscreen" | Source: USPTO
Apple fired back with its own letter to the Committee on Wednesday written by the company's General Counsel Bruce Sewell.
"That a proprietary technology That a proprietary technology becomes quite popular does not transform it into a ?standard? subject to the same legal constraints as true standards,? Sewell wrote.
From Sewell's letter:
Apple argues against Google's claim, saying that standardized technologies create the base on which non-standardized or proprietary technology is built. Therefore, if non-standardized property were governed by the same rules as declared essential patents there would be no innovation in the marketplace which would in turn harm consumers.The capabilities of an iPhone are categorically different from a conventional phone, and result from Apple?s ability to bring its traditional innovation in computing to the mobile market. Using an iPhone to take photos, manage a home-finance spreadsheet, play video games, or run countless other applications has nothing to do with standardized protocols. Apple spent billions in research and development to create the iPhone, and third party software developers have spent billions more to develop applications that run on it. The price of an iPhone reflects the value of these nonstandardized technologies — as well as the value of the aesthetic design of the iPhone, which also reflects immense study and development by Apple, and which is entirely unrelated to standards.
"There?s a big difference between technology that became popular because it was adopted as a standard and technology that became popular because consumers fell in love with it. In the case of the smartphone patent wars, the first makes a cellphone a cellphone and the second makes it an iPhone," All Things D's John Paczkowski writes. "One is a core technology, the other is experiential product differentiation."
The two companies are currently engaged in a fierce international court struggle over patents related to Google's Android and Apple's iOS mobile operating systems. Most recently a German court cleared Motorola's Xoom tablet of infringing Apple iPad patents.
In the U.S., the International Trade Commission is currently reviewing a recent decision that could see the ban of Apple products which infringe on a Motorola Wi-Fi patent. The implications of the review are severs as many iDevices could see sales stoppages in one of the world's largest wireless markets. Motorola first filed the grievance in 2010.
Comments
Those algorithms should be de facto standards and licensed under FRAND
Such an eloquent response from Apple's legal department. But let's not forget that a lawyer will argue based on who his current employer is, not necessarily what he personally believes. Was Mr. Sewell still working for Intel when they were being accused of anticompetitive business practices, or when Apple fans were still trashing Intel? But now that he works for Apple, it's time to cheer him on.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rioviva
I actually agree with Google. On that note, I think their search algorithms have become essential for the industry. As much as I've tried switching to Bing or Yahoo, I keep coming back to Google's engine.
Those algorithms should be de facto standards and licensed under FRAND
No, it's a very thin claim indeed. It's also illogical.
The reason the cellular radio patents are essential is that you can't make a phone without them. Clearly, you can make a great phone, even a great multi-touch smartphone, without Apple's patents. You can also make a search engine without Google's algorithms.
Apple's patents aren't essential to making a phone or even competing with them in the same industry. They are only essential to make a phone that will beat Apple economically. Thus Google's facile, misleading use of the term "economically essential."
Any judge or court that sides with Google on this would be "anti-competition." They would be supporting Google as a company in it's fight with Apple, not supporting the industry as a whole.
What an incredibly mealy-mouthed rationalization of intellectual property theft.
Since Google seems incapable of developing a "smartphone" OS that does not infringe, they should get out of the business. There is no requirement they develop products further in that area.
With such absurd illogic in play, one could just as easily argue that since I have less money than Larry Page, it is imperative that he send me $1 million to ensure my quality of life does not fall below acceptable standards.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gazoobee
No, it's a very thin claim indeed. It's also illogical.
The reason the cellular radio patents are essential is that you can't make a phone without them. Clearly, you can make a great phone, even a great multi-touch smartphone, without Apple's UI patents and without slavishly copying everything they do. You can also make a search engine without Google's algorithms.
Hey, isheep, how many times are you slavishly copying "slavishly copying"?
I'm glad Apple's legal team slapped Google in the face with that response. Tired of hearing Apple losing these patent cases overseas though.
Weak.
If Google succeeds in persuading lawmakers with this argument, I wonder if they will volunteer to pay Apple a FRAND fee for all the millions of Android devices which have been sold.
Something tells me they expect to dump this bucket of crap on the OEMs.
So if you're going to steal something, go big. If you steal enough and make it popular you suddenly retroactively didn't steal it!
So Google is saying if we steal your idea and make it ubiquitous because we stole it and used it against you, it should no longer be a valid patent. Wow, just wow.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gazoobee
No, it's a very thin claim indeed. It's also illogical.
The reason the cellular radio patents are essential is that you can't make a phone without them. Clearly, you can make a great phone, even a great multi-touch smartphone, without Apple's patents. You can also make a search engine without Google's algorithms.
Apple's patents aren't essential to making a phone or even competing with them in the same industry. They are only essential to make a phone that will beat Apple economically. Thus Google's facile, misleading use of the term "economically essential."
Any judge or court that sides with Google on this would be "anti-competition." They would be supporting Google as a company in it's fight with Apple, not supporting the industry as a whole.
It's also interesting to note that economic viability is one of the tests as to whether a patent is sufficiently innovative to deserve protection. If a company is making a profit using the patent then the profit is evidence the patent adds some value that wasn't there before. In other words, it's possible Google is shooting itself in the foot with this argument. They are essentially arguing that Apple's stuff is SO innovative that it must be patentable, but that the government should nationalize those patents.
I was going to bring this up because it seems Google is not quite so happy to share technology that their core business depends on:
http://www.seroundtable.com/pagerank-patent-12731.html
They are only happy if it involves taking technology other people have developed.
Companies can't pick and choose what gets shared and what doesn't for their own benefit. Either everbody is forced to share or no one is. Since the former will never happen, the latter is the only option - anything in between creates an unfair market.
I don't know why Google can't just innovate instead of using litigation : D
Quote:
Originally Posted by blackbook
Tired of hearing Apple losing these patent cases overseas though.
Maybe there is something in this trend?
Oh Google. Begging the question are we? You can't define a patent as "commercially essential" by how widely copied it is, and then use that definition to argue that such patents cannot be therefore be enforced against the copiers.
It boils down to arguing, "if a patent holder's right is infringed on by enough parties, the patent holder loses the right to relief from infringement because now the infringing parties 'need' it, making it 'essential'." Yeah, what forum troll-grade horseshit logic is that? Google, you used to be cool.
[INDENT]"One Generation's Invention Is Necessity Of The Next" ~Unknown[/INDENT]
2) There are some networking patents i know of, like with cellular air interfaces, that are essential because they do have to work the same across vendors to create a homogenous network, but I see no good examples of Apple's patents that are essential for the industry.
3) At least Google is acknowledging that Apple has patented tech before others. That's more than I can say for the resident trolls of this forum.
So if enough other companies think what you've done is good work, they should be allowed to use it? You did all the hard work to make it popular, and because you succeeded, they'll use it with no questions asked? That... doesn't seem right.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Booga
It's also interesting to note that economic viability is one of the tests as to whether a patent is sufficiently innovative to deserve protection. If a company is making a profit using the patent then the profit is evidence the patent adds some value that wasn't there before. In other words, it's possible Google is shooting itself in the foot with this argument. They are essentially arguing that Apple's stuff is SO innovative that it must be patentable, but that the government should nationalize those patents.
Not that they will be successfully taking this tack, but in a world where this argument would make some kind of twisted sense, they'd also be arguing against the benefit of their own patents. "Google's search engine technology is obviously so superior, other competitors have no chance of ever catching up to them... therefore, their unique algorithms must be shared for the benefit of the world." Effin' insane.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Marvin
I don't know why Google can't just innovate instead of using litigation : D
Nicely done!
I'm waiting for Google to argue that if enough civil liberties are taken away from the citizens, the citizens lose the right to have those civil liberties because depriving citizens of those rights has become "essential" to government. Same goddamn horseshit argument.