"Qualcomm sticks to IPR guns as patent platform nears"
gii.co.jp
THE LAUNCH OF the 3G Patent Platform Partnership (3G3P), scheduled for September this year, will proceed without the participation of Qualcomm, the U.S. company that claims the majority of essential patents for cdma2000 – and now wideband-CDMA as well. However, neither the 3G3P nor Qualcomm are overly concerned about the situation , with both claiming they will prosper without the other.
Over the past seven months, the 3G3P has submitted proposals to the U.S. Department of Justice, Japan’s Fair Trade Commission and the European Patents Office for approval of its patent platform. The platform is designed to limit the royalties due on essential patents for third generation infrastructure and equipment to a cumulative cap of 5%. The platform covers four product categories: terminals; infrastructure; test equipment and everything else.
The 3G3P has recommended a standard royalty rate of 0.1% for each essential patent. If more than 50 essential patents are required for the manufacture of a terminal or base station or test site, the standard rate is proportionately reduced to maintain the 5% cap.
Serge Raes, director of business development at the 3G3P, says the partnership wants to reduce overall royalty payments because of the high cost required for infrastructure investment – anything from US$4 billion to US$7 billion for a large European country, depending on who you listen to. “The business case for 3G is not too good, and some companies may doubt they can get a decent return on their investment. If royalties are high, they may even review their decision to enter the 3G market,” says Raes.
The cumulative cap is, of course, anathema to Qualcomm, which aggressively defends its IS95 patents and is dependent upon them for much of its revenue. Qualcomm will say no more about its individual royalty agreements other than it charges low, single-digit rates – although obviously much more than a cumulative 5%.
Lou Lupin, Qualcomm’s senior vice president-proprietary rights counsel, says the company did participate in the startup phase of the 3G3P when it was still known as the UMTS IPR Working Group. “But as it became more apparent where it was headed – how the group would be organized and how patents would be evaluated – our participation stopped,” said Lupin. He added that one of the main deterrents was the 5% cap.
The 3G3P is a voluntary group that will act as a de facto patent pool. Members (currently there are 19 full members, plus two associates) submit their patent claims, and it is then up to the 3G3P to evaluate the claims and judge not only which are essential, but which were registered first. Other patent holders can challenge the decision but they must first join the partnership and have their patents evaluated. While there is little point questioning Qualcomm’s dominance of IS95-based technologies, there is great debate about whether it will, or should, receive the same royalty rates for W-CDMA.
Raes does not believe that Qualcomm will be able to exist outside of the group. He says that if the industry wants to regulate the number of patents held by a single entity, and the revenues garnered from those patents, then it will not be affected by the stance of a single company even one so stubborn as Qualcomm .
“Some companies claim they own the majority of essential patents, but these claims must be treated with some reserve until those patents can be evaluated,” says Raes. “Some companies have also brought political pressure to delay the introduction of the patent platform as it would have an impact on their present royalty agreements,” he added.
At the end of the day, Raes says that some W-CDMA manufacturers may be able to bypass Qualcomm altogether if patents held by Ericsson, for example, are recognized as essential within the 3G3P.
Not so, says Lupin. “The 3G3P will have no effect on us whatsoever. It is a voluntary group, and we have so many bilateral agreements in place for W-CDMA that it would make little difference anyway,” he said. Lupin says that Qualcomm’s claims on W-CDMA are not substantially different from its claims on IS-95. “The important one’s are all the same,” he says.
Only last week Qualcomm won rulings in both Japan and Europe that upheld claims on its CDMA patents. The Japanese ruling was particularly interesting because it was in response to opposition proceedings initiated last year by six companies, including Nokia, Ericsson and NTT – the three power houses behind the development of W-CDMA. The patent, entitled “Spread Spectrum Multiple Access Communication System Using Satellite or Terrestrial Repeaters,” claims inventions that are essential to all viable commercial CDMA standards, including W-CDMA and cdma2000.
Moreover, despite a well-documented slowdown in the South Korean market, which generates about 20% of Qualcomm’s revenues from chipset sales and licensing, Lupin says the company has already issued licenses for W-CDMA to all of the major South Korean vendors. This backs up the claims of Irwin Jacobs, Qualcomm’s chairman, that the company will receive the same royalties in South Korea, regardless of the decision to use W-CDMA by the five incumbent IS95-based operators
Although, Jacobs admitted that there will be more competition in the market for W-CDMA chipsets, he said the South Korean handset vendors had asked Qualcomm to develop W-CDMA chipsets because of its experience with the underlying technology.
However, Qualcomm did admit last week it would sell only 12-13 million chipsets in the fourth quarter, compared with 15 million in the third quarter, following the South Korean ban on handset subsidies which came into effect June 1. |