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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM)
QCOM 155.82-1.3%Jan 23 9:30 AM EST

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To: John Hayman who wrote (144335)8/16/2006 11:20:57 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (4) of 152472
 
Nokia is really nutsomania!! First, they form the GSM Slimeball Guild of Hagfish, from which QCOM is excluded [not being a GSM exponent]. They hold their meetings and come up with weirdo standards - GSM GPRS EDGE W-CDMA, and QCOM is supposed to know what's going on and is supposed to be bound by agreements in which they didn't participate. QCOM is supposed to "disclose" patents when they weren't in the standards discussions and were even told their intellectual property was of no value and was irrelevant and of course the GSM Guild could check out all the patents they liked and take as long as they liked doing it as they are all public record.

<The link between these three stories is the fact that Nokia also claims that Qualcomm did not make timely disclosure of its patents, according to Bill Plummer, VP of External Affairs for Nokia, as quoted in RCR Wireless News:

Qualcomm belatedly declared certain patents as essential after standards had been set and significant investments had already been made within the industry. Qualcomm violated its ETSI obligations by refusing to negotiate a FRAND license royalty for the use of declared essential IPR, but instead sought to exclude Nokia from using the IPR through court actions seeking injunctions and exclusionary relief.
>

It must be unpleasant to be Bill Plummer and have to make up some cock and bull story to pretend that a pig's ear is a silk purse. But I suppose that's the testing and training that "public relations" or "external affairs" people get. Can they lie with a straight face? Can they make up fantasy verbal realms with no attachment to reality?

I suppose Bill has got a copy of QCOM's agreement to give away their intellectual property to the Slimeball Hagfish Guild to the SETI gang [Search for Extra-TDMA Intelligence] for no cost which he can show us. If he can't find a copy, could he explain how come QCOM seemed to want to charge for their other intellectual property but Nokia thought they'd be happy to give away a rope, made up into a noose, with which to hang QCOM's CDMA2000 business? Was Nokia not surprised by that idea when they started knowingly using the intellectual property? Or were they too busy tightening the noose?

If some gang of bandits decides of their own volition to use somebody's property who isn't in the gang, without that person knowing, they can't really be surprised when that person objects to the illegal use and starts demanding payment when they find out about it. Can the Nokian's not remember the GSM Guild telling the world that QCOM intellectual property was not part of W-CDMA and I certainly never heard that it might be part of GSM and GPRS and EDGE?

Court should be fun!

Mqurice
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