Request for Comments and Announcement of Workshop on Standard-Setting Issues, 28036-28038 [2011-11704]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 93 / Friday, May 13, 2011 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2011–11777 Filed 5–12–11; 8:45 am]
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mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Request for Comments and
Announcement of Workshop on
Standard-Setting Issues
Federal Trade Commission.
Notice of workshop and request
for comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
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17:22 May 12, 2011
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The Federal Trade
Commission seeks public comments in
connection with a project to examine
the practical and legal issues arising
from the incorporation of patented
technologies in collaborative standards,
including the risk of patent ‘‘hold-up’’
and its effect on competition and
consumers. Among the topics to be
considered are the disclosure of patent
rights during the standard-setting
process, the implications of a patent
holder’s commitment to license users of
the standard on reasonable and nondiscriminatory (‘‘RAND’’) terms, and the
possibility of negotiating license terms
prior to choosing the standard. The
Commission seeks the views of
consumers and the legal, academic, and
business communities on the issues to
be explored in this project. As part of
the project, the Commission will
conduct a workshop and may prepare a
report discussing these issues. This
notice poses a series of questions
relevant to those issues for which the
Commission seeks comment.
DATES: The workshop will be held June
21, 2011, in the Conference Center of
the FTC office building at 601 New
Jersey Avenue, NW., Washington, DC.
Prior to the workshop, the Commission
will publish an agenda and further
information on its Web site. Comments
in response to this notice must be
received on or before July 8, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form by
following the instructions in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Comments in electronic form
should be submitted by using the
following weblink: https://
ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/
standardsproject (and following the
instructions on the web-based form).
Comments filed in paper form should be
mailed or delivered to the following
address: Federal Trade Commission,
Office of the Secretary, Room H–113
(Annex X), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20580, in the
manner detailed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Patrick J. Roach,
standardsproject@ftc.gov, FTC, 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Rm. NJ–
6264, Washington, DC 20580, 202–326–
2793.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
project focuses on practical and legal
issues that arise from collaborative
standard setting when standards
incorporate technologies that are
protected by intellectual property rights.
Such a situation raises the potential for
SUMMARY:
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
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‘‘hold-up’’ by a patent owner—a demand
for higher royalties or other more costly
licensing terms after the standard is
implemented than could have been
obtained before the standard was
chosen. Hold-up can subvert the
competitive process of choosing among
technologies and undermine the
integrity of standard-setting activities.
Consumers can be harmed if
manufacturers are able to pass on higher
costs resulting from hold-up.
Collaborative standard setting plays
an important role in the modern
economy. In areas such as information
and communications technology, for
example, the usefulness of complex
products and services often depends on
the interoperability of components and
products of different firms. To enhance
the value of these complex products,
private firms—including competing
manufacturers, their customers and
suppliers—frequently participate in
standard-setting organizations (SSOs) to
set technological standards for use in
designing products or services. While
such collaborations are not without
antitrust risks, antitrust enforcers in the
United States and Europe have
recognized the valuable and procompetitive character of this kind of
legitimate standard-setting process.1 It
can lead to innovation, better products
and more competition.
Various technological alternatives
may compete to be selected for the
standard. But once a technology is
incorporated into a standard, and the
standard becomes widely used, a
manufacturer may find it difficult, or
indeed impossible, to switch to what
were once alternative technologies. A
firm with a patent reading on the
standard often can demand a royalty
that reflects not only the ex ante market
value of the patented invention, but also
added value associated with changes in
the marketplace and investments made
to implement the standard. This has
been called patent ‘‘hold-up.’’
SSOs have sought to prevent hold-up
in several ways. First, many SSOs have
patent disclosure rules that try to ensure
that SSO members are aware of relevant
patents when adopting a standard.
Second, they commonly require a patent
holder to commit that after the standardsetting process is completed, it will
license the patent on terms that are
1 U.S. Dept of Justice & Fed. Trade Comm’n,
Antitrust Enforcement and Intellectual Property
Rights: Promoting Innovation and Competition, at
33–56 (2007); Guidelines on the applicability of
Article 101 of the Treaty on the functioning of the
European Union to horizontal co-operation
agreements, 2011 OJ C 11/1, Chapter 7 (2010),
available at https://ec.europa.eu/competition/
antitrust/legislation/horizontal.html.
E:\FR\FM\13MYN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 93 / Friday, May 13, 2011 / Notices
reasonable and non-discriminatory
(‘‘RAND’’). Third, they may require or
allow ex ante disclosure of specific
licensing terms as part of the standardsetting process, before users of the
standard are locked in to using the
patented technology.
However, the ability of disclosure
rules to protect consumers from patent
hold-up is unclear. Such rules cannot
bind patent holders that are not
members of the SSO. Moreover, not all
SSOs have disclosure rules. Even when
SSOs do have disclosure rules, the
terms will not necessarily lead to
disclosure of all relevant patents. For
instance, disclosure is sometimes
required only of issued patents, and not
pending applications that later may
ripen into patents reading on a standard.
Further, to alleviate the burden on SSO
members, disclosure usually is required
only of patents known to a firm’s
representatives in the standards process,
and does not require a full search of the
firm’s patent portfolio.
Many rules encourage disclosure of
the existence of relevant patents, but are
vague as to what should be disclosed
and when. This lack of clarity may
undermine the ability of standards users
to enforce the rules through allegations
based on fraud, patent law estoppel or
antitrust. In some situations, it may be
possible for a patent holder to deceive
SSO members concerning its patent
rights—subverting the competitive
process of choosing among
technologies—without violating the
particular disclosure rules. For these
and other reasons, disclosure rules often
may not provide full transparency about
possible patent interests implicated by a
standard, or effective relief of the
problem of potential patent hold-up.
The most common mechanism used
by SSOs to attempt to prevent patent
hold-up is the RAND commitment.
Many SSOs seek RAND commitments
only on disclosed patents. Some SSOs
require a RAND commitment for all
patents owned by firms participating in
the standard-setting process, and
dispense with a patent disclosure
requirement. Setting specific terms of
the patent license generally occurs in
bilateral negotiations between the patent
holder and individual standards users
after the standard-setting process is
completed, sometimes long after the
standard has been implemented.
Proponents of this practice argue that
the use of RAND commitments often
simplifies the standard-setting process
by allowing participants to focus on
technical issues. Others criticize the
RAND commitment as vague. They
worry that leaving the negotiation of
licensing terms until after the standard
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has been implemented gives the patent
holder excessive leverage that can lead
to patent hold-up. Whether a RAND
commitment is sufficient protection
against hold-up depends on numerous
questions concerning its enforcement B
whether it can be enforced under
contract law, patent law, or antitrust
law, and what principles the courts
should look to in deciding disputes over
RAND licensing terms.
To limit the patent holder’s leverage
after the standard is implemented, some
SSOs allow or require disclosure of
specific royalty and licensing terms ex
ante B during the standard setting
process. The Department of Justice and
the Commission have stated that
unilateral announcements of price or
licensing terms by patent holders as part
of the standards process present little
anticompetitive risk. The agencies also
have stated that they will apply the rule
of reason when evaluating joint
activities that allow potential licensees,
before the standard is adopted, to
negotiate licensing terms with patent
holders.2 Despite this assurance by the
enforcement agencies, however, it does
not appear that there has been wide use
of ex ante licensing.
In this project, the Commission seeks
to examine these and other issues
pertaining to potential patent hold-up of
collaborative standards. It intends to
consider antitrust issues, as well as
examine how other legal doctrines (such
as contract, patent, and consumer
protection law), and economic and
practical considerations affect the
analysis of the issues. The Commission
invites public comment on questions
relevant to these topics, including:
Disclosure of Patent Rights in an SSO
• How do patent disclosure policies
vary among SSOs? How do disclosure
policies vary in their effectiveness of
making SSO members aware of relevant
patent rights?
• What considerations drive variation
in disclosure policies? Why do SSOs
adopt policies that may lead to
incomplete disclosure of relevant
patents, for instance by excluding patent
applications from disclosure or by not
requiring members to search their patent
portfolios?
• When SSO policies create a
potential for incomplete disclosure of
members’ patent rights, how else can
members protect themselves against
hold-up?
• When have SSO patent disclosure
policies been reviewed or amended?
2 U.S. Dep’t of Justice & Fed. Trade Comm’n,
Antitrust Enforcement and Intellectual Property
Rights: Promoting Innovation and Competition, at
6–7, 33–56 (2007).
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What prompted those reviews? What
were the results of the reviews?
• Are there mechanisms for an SSO to
encourage disclosure of relevant patents
or patent applications held by
nonmembers?
• What ambiguities concerning the
scope of a disclosure requirement exist
in SSO disclosure policies? Why do
they persist? Would more clarity be
beneficial in preventing patent hold-up?
• What principles apply in judging
whether a patent holder’s conduct
before an SSO is deceptive? What is the
role of the SSO’s patent disclosure
policy in judging whether conduct is
deceptive or unfair?
• Does non-disclosure or lack of
information about relevant patent rights
subvert the competitive process of
selecting technologies for standards or
undermine the integrity of standardsetting activities? How?
The RAND Licensing Commitment
• Is a RAND commitment part of an
enforceable contract between the SSO
and the patent holder? Between the SSO
members and the patent holder? Should
non-members of the SSO who wish to
use the standard be able to enforce the
commitment?
• Do RAND licensing commitments
without accompanying disclosure
commitments provide adequate
protection against patent hold-up?
• Has any SSO provided guidance on
how ‘‘reasonable’’ and ‘‘nondiscriminatory’’ licensing terms should
be judged for a RAND commitment?
What is that guidance? Why do SSOs
not provide more definition of RAND?
• Absent an SSO’s definition or
express limitations given by the patent
holder in its commitment, by what
standards should ‘‘reasonable’’ and ‘‘nondiscriminatory’’ be determined? What
principles should a court or tribunal
look to in resolving a dispute between
a potential licensor and licensee
concerning whether proffered terms are
RAND?
• What evidence may be relevant in
determining whether a proffered license
is reasonable and non-discriminatory?
• Should a RAND commitment
preclude a patent holder from
demanding from users of the standard a
cross-license for patents that are
essential to practice of the standard? A
license of nonessential patents?
• If a patent holder that has given a
RAND commitment enters into crosslicenses with some standards users, how
should these be evaluated for purposes
of determining whether terms it offers
others are non-discriminatory?
• Should a RAND commitment
preclude a patent owner from seeking in
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 93 / Friday, May 13, 2011 / Notices
patent litigation a preliminary
injunction against practice of the
standard? A permanent injunction? An
exclusion order in the International
Trade Commission? How should courts
and the ITC take a RAND commitment
into account in these contexts?
• Under what circumstances should a
RAND commitment given by a patent
holder bind later owners of the patent?
What steps can or should SSOs take to
ensure that a transferred patent remains
subject to a prior RAND commitment?
• Does reneging on a RAND
commitment subvert the competitive
process of selecting technologies for
standards or undermine the integrity of
standard-setting activities? How?
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Ex Ante Disclosure and/or Negotiation
of Licensing Terms
• What has been the experience of
those SSOs that require or allow ex ante
disclosure of licensing terms? How
frequently do ex ante disclosures of
licensing terms occur? Why are ex ante
disclosures of licensing terms not
required or made?
• How frequently do ex ante bilateral
negotiations of licensing terms occur?
• How frequently do ex ante
multilateral negotiations of licensing
terms occur? How are such negotiations
conducted?
• What factors affect a firm’s decision
to engage in, or not engage in, ex ante
discussions or negotiations?
• How does a patent owner’s ex ante
disclosure of licensing terms affect the
process of choosing technologies for
incorporation into the standard?
• How do ex ante discussions or
negotiations of licensing terms affect the
process of choosing technologies for
incorporation into the standard?
• Has experience shown a difference
between terms negotiated ex ante and
terms negotiated ex post?
• To what extent do concerns about
antitrust liability deter ex ante
disclosure or negotiation of licensing
terms?
• What considerations should shape a
rule of reason analysis of joint ex ante
license discussions or negotiations?
Instructions for Filing Public Comments
Interested parties are invited to
submit written comments electronically
or in paper form. We must receive your
comment by July 8, 2011. Because paper
mail addressed to the FTC is subject to
delay due to heightened security
screening, please consider submitting
your comments in electronic form.
Comments filed in electronic form
should be submitted using the following
Web link: https://
ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/
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17:22 May 12, 2011
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standardsproject (and following the
instructions on the Web-based form). To
ensure that the Commission considers
an electronic comment, you must file it
on the Web-based form at the Web link:
https://ftcpublic.commentworks.com/
ftc/standardsproject. If this notice
appears at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!home, you may also file an electronic
comment through that Web site. The
Commission will consider all comments
that regulations.gov forwards to it. You
may also visit the FTC Web site at
https://www.ftc.gov to read the notice
and the news release describing it.
Comments should refer to ‘‘Patent
Standards Workshop, Project No. P11–
1204’’ to facilitate the organization of
comments. Please note that your
comment—including your name and
your State—will be placed on the public
record of this proceeding, including on
the publicly accessible FTC Web site, at
https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm. Because
comments will be made public, they
should not include any sensitive
personal information, such as any
individual’s Social Security Number;
date of birth; driver’s license number or
other State identification number, or
foreign country equivalent; passport
number; financial account number; or
credit or debit card number. Comments
also should not include any sensitive
health information, such as medical
records or other individually
identifiable health information. In
addition, comments should not include
‘‘trade secret or any commercial or
financial information which is obtained
from any person and which is privileged
or confidential’’ as provided in Section
6(f) of the Federal Trade Commission
Act (FTC Act), 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and FTC
Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2).
Comments containing material for
which confidential treatment is
requested must be filed in paper form,
must be clearly labeled ‘‘Confidential,’’
and must comply with FTC Rule 4.9(c).3
A comment filed in paper form
should include the ‘‘Patent Standards
Workshop, Project No. P11 1204’’
reference both in the text and on the
envelope, and should be mailed or
delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission, Office of the
Secretary, Room HB113 (Annex X), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
3 The comment must be accompanied by an
explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request,
and must identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public record.
The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission’s General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See FTC
Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
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Washington, DC 20580. The FTC is
requesting that any comment filed in
paper form be sent by courier or
overnight service, if possible, because
U.S. postal mail in the Washington area
and at the Commission is subject to
delay due to heightened security
precautions. The FTC Act and other
laws that the Commission administers
permit the collection of public
comments to consider and use in this
proceeding as appropriate. The
Commission will consider all timely
and responsive public comments that it
receives, whether filed in paper or
electronic form. Comments received
will be available to the public on the
FTC Web site, to the extent practicable,
at https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to
remove home contact information for
individuals from the public comments it
receives before placing those comments
on the FTC Web site. More information,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC’s
privacy policy, at https://www.ftc.gov/
ftc/privacy.htm.
By direction of the Commission.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–11704 Filed 5–12–11; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 93 (Friday, May 13, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28036-28038]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-11704]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Request for Comments and Announcement of Workshop on Standard-
Setting Issues
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Notice of workshop and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission seeks public comments in
connection with a project to examine the practical and legal issues
arising from the incorporation of patented technologies in
collaborative standards, including the risk of patent ``hold-up'' and
its effect on competition and consumers. Among the topics to be
considered are the disclosure of patent rights during the standard-
setting process, the implications of a patent holder's commitment to
license users of the standard on reasonable and non-discriminatory
(``RAND'') terms, and the possibility of negotiating license terms
prior to choosing the standard. The Commission seeks the views of
consumers and the legal, academic, and business communities on the
issues to be explored in this project. As part of the project, the
Commission will conduct a workshop and may prepare a report discussing
these issues. This notice poses a series of questions relevant to those
issues for which the Commission seeks comment.
DATES: The workshop will be held June 21, 2011, in the Conference
Center of the FTC office building at 601 New Jersey Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC. Prior to the workshop, the Commission will publish an
agenda and further information on its Web site. Comments in response to
this notice must be received on or before July 8, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form by following the instructions in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below. Comments in electronic form
should be submitted by using the following weblink: https://ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/standardsproject (and following the
instructions on the web-based form). Comments filed in paper form
should be mailed or delivered to the following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary, Room H-113 (Annex X), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580, in the manner detailed
in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Patrick J. Roach,
standardsproject@ftc.gov, FTC, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Rm. NJ-
6264, Washington, DC 20580, 202-326-2793.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This project focuses on practical and legal
issues that arise from collaborative standard setting when standards
incorporate technologies that are protected by intellectual property
rights. Such a situation raises the potential for ``hold-up'' by a
patent owner--a demand for higher royalties or other more costly
licensing terms after the standard is implemented than could have been
obtained before the standard was chosen. Hold-up can subvert the
competitive process of choosing among technologies and undermine the
integrity of standard-setting activities. Consumers can be harmed if
manufacturers are able to pass on higher costs resulting from hold-up.
Collaborative standard setting plays an important role in the
modern economy. In areas such as information and communications
technology, for example, the usefulness of complex products and
services often depends on the interoperability of components and
products of different firms. To enhance the value of these complex
products, private firms--including competing manufacturers, their
customers and suppliers--frequently participate in standard-setting
organizations (SSOs) to set technological standards for use in
designing products or services. While such collaborations are not
without antitrust risks, antitrust enforcers in the United States and
Europe have recognized the valuable and pro-competitive character of
this kind of legitimate standard-setting process.\1\ It can lead to
innovation, better products and more competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ U.S. Dept of Justice & Fed. Trade Comm'n, Antitrust
Enforcement and Intellectual Property Rights: Promoting Innovation
and Competition, at 33-56 (2007); Guidelines on the applicability of
Article 101 of the Treaty on the functioning of the European Union
to horizontal co-operation agreements, 2011 OJ C 11/1, Chapter 7
(2010), available at https://ec.europa.eu/competition/antitrust/legislation/horizontal.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Various technological alternatives may compete to be selected for
the standard. But once a technology is incorporated into a standard,
and the standard becomes widely used, a manufacturer may find it
difficult, or indeed impossible, to switch to what were once
alternative technologies. A firm with a patent reading on the standard
often can demand a royalty that reflects not only the ex ante market
value of the patented invention, but also added value associated with
changes in the marketplace and investments made to implement the
standard. This has been called patent ``hold-up.''
SSOs have sought to prevent hold-up in several ways. First, many
SSOs have patent disclosure rules that try to ensure that SSO members
are aware of relevant patents when adopting a standard. Second, they
commonly require a patent holder to commit that after the standard-
setting process is completed, it will license the patent on terms that
are
[[Page 28037]]
reasonable and non-discriminatory (``RAND''). Third, they may require
or allow ex ante disclosure of specific licensing terms as part of the
standard-setting process, before users of the standard are locked in to
using the patented technology.
However, the ability of disclosure rules to protect consumers from
patent hold-up is unclear. Such rules cannot bind patent holders that
are not members of the SSO. Moreover, not all SSOs have disclosure
rules. Even when SSOs do have disclosure rules, the terms will not
necessarily lead to disclosure of all relevant patents. For instance,
disclosure is sometimes required only of issued patents, and not
pending applications that later may ripen into patents reading on a
standard. Further, to alleviate the burden on SSO members, disclosure
usually is required only of patents known to a firm's representatives
in the standards process, and does not require a full search of the
firm's patent portfolio.
Many rules encourage disclosure of the existence of relevant
patents, but are vague as to what should be disclosed and when. This
lack of clarity may undermine the ability of standards users to enforce
the rules through allegations based on fraud, patent law estoppel or
antitrust. In some situations, it may be possible for a patent holder
to deceive SSO members concerning its patent rights--subverting the
competitive process of choosing among technologies--without violating
the particular disclosure rules. For these and other reasons,
disclosure rules often may not provide full transparency about possible
patent interests implicated by a standard, or effective relief of the
problem of potential patent hold-up.
The most common mechanism used by SSOs to attempt to prevent patent
hold-up is the RAND commitment. Many SSOs seek RAND commitments only on
disclosed patents. Some SSOs require a RAND commitment for all patents
owned by firms participating in the standard-setting process, and
dispense with a patent disclosure requirement. Setting specific terms
of the patent license generally occurs in bilateral negotiations
between the patent holder and individual standards users after the
standard-setting process is completed, sometimes long after the
standard has been implemented.
Proponents of this practice argue that the use of RAND commitments
often simplifies the standard-setting process by allowing participants
to focus on technical issues. Others criticize the RAND commitment as
vague. They worry that leaving the negotiation of licensing terms until
after the standard has been implemented gives the patent holder
excessive leverage that can lead to patent hold-up. Whether a RAND
commitment is sufficient protection against hold-up depends on numerous
questions concerning its enforcement B whether it can be enforced under
contract law, patent law, or antitrust law, and what principles the
courts should look to in deciding disputes over RAND licensing terms.
To limit the patent holder's leverage after the standard is
implemented, some SSOs allow or require disclosure of specific royalty
and licensing terms ex ante B during the standard setting process. The
Department of Justice and the Commission have stated that unilateral
announcements of price or licensing terms by patent holders as part of
the standards process present little anticompetitive risk. The agencies
also have stated that they will apply the rule of reason when
evaluating joint activities that allow potential licensees, before the
standard is adopted, to negotiate licensing terms with patent
holders.\2\ Despite this assurance by the enforcement agencies,
however, it does not appear that there has been wide use of ex ante
licensing.
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\2\ U.S. Dep't of Justice & Fed. Trade Comm'n, Antitrust
Enforcement and Intellectual Property Rights: Promoting Innovation
and Competition, at 6-7, 33-56 (2007).
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In this project, the Commission seeks to examine these and other
issues pertaining to potential patent hold-up of collaborative
standards. It intends to consider antitrust issues, as well as examine
how other legal doctrines (such as contract, patent, and consumer
protection law), and economic and practical considerations affect the
analysis of the issues. The Commission invites public comment on
questions relevant to these topics, including:
Disclosure of Patent Rights in an SSO
How do patent disclosure policies vary among SSOs? How do
disclosure policies vary in their effectiveness of making SSO members
aware of relevant patent rights?
What considerations drive variation in disclosure
policies? Why do SSOs adopt policies that may lead to incomplete
disclosure of relevant patents, for instance by excluding patent
applications from disclosure or by not requiring members to search
their patent portfolios?
When SSO policies create a potential for incomplete
disclosure of members' patent rights, how else can members protect
themselves against hold-up?
When have SSO patent disclosure policies been reviewed or
amended? What prompted those reviews? What were the results of the
reviews?
Are there mechanisms for an SSO to encourage disclosure of
relevant patents or patent applications held by nonmembers?
What ambiguities concerning the scope of a disclosure
requirement exist in SSO disclosure policies? Why do they persist?
Would more clarity be beneficial in preventing patent hold-up?
What principles apply in judging whether a patent holder's
conduct before an SSO is deceptive? What is the role of the SSO's
patent disclosure policy in judging whether conduct is deceptive or
unfair?
Does non-disclosure or lack of information about relevant
patent rights subvert the competitive process of selecting technologies
for standards or undermine the integrity of standard-setting
activities? How?
The RAND Licensing Commitment
Is a RAND commitment part of an enforceable contract
between the SSO and the patent holder? Between the SSO members and the
patent holder? Should non-members of the SSO who wish to use the
standard be able to enforce the commitment?
Do RAND licensing commitments without accompanying
disclosure commitments provide adequate protection against patent hold-
up?
Has any SSO provided guidance on how ``reasonable'' and
``non-discriminatory'' licensing terms should be judged for a RAND
commitment? What is that guidance? Why do SSOs not provide more
definition of RAND?
Absent an SSO's definition or express limitations given by
the patent holder in its commitment, by what standards should
``reasonable'' and ``non-discriminatory'' be determined? What
principles should a court or tribunal look to in resolving a dispute
between a potential licensor and licensee concerning whether proffered
terms are RAND?
What evidence may be relevant in determining whether a
proffered license is reasonable and non-discriminatory?
Should a RAND commitment preclude a patent holder from
demanding from users of the standard a cross-license for patents that
are essential to practice of the standard? A license of nonessential
patents?
If a patent holder that has given a RAND commitment enters
into cross-licenses with some standards users, how should these be
evaluated for purposes of determining whether terms it offers others
are non-discriminatory?
Should a RAND commitment preclude a patent owner from
seeking in
[[Page 28038]]
patent litigation a preliminary injunction against practice of the
standard? A permanent injunction? An exclusion order in the
International Trade Commission? How should courts and the ITC take a
RAND commitment into account in these contexts?
Under what circumstances should a RAND commitment given by
a patent holder bind later owners of the patent? What steps can or
should SSOs take to ensure that a transferred patent remains subject to
a prior RAND commitment?
Does reneging on a RAND commitment subvert the competitive
process of selecting technologies for standards or undermine the
integrity of standard-setting activities? How?
Ex Ante Disclosure and/or Negotiation of Licensing Terms
What has been the experience of those SSOs that require or
allow ex ante disclosure of licensing terms? How frequently do ex ante
disclosures of licensing terms occur? Why are ex ante disclosures of
licensing terms not required or made?
How frequently do ex ante bilateral negotiations of
licensing terms occur?
How frequently do ex ante multilateral negotiations of
licensing terms occur? How are such negotiations conducted?
What factors affect a firm's decision to engage in, or not
engage in, ex ante discussions or negotiations?
How does a patent owner's ex ante disclosure of licensing
terms affect the process of choosing technologies for incorporation
into the standard?
How do ex ante discussions or negotiations of licensing
terms affect the process of choosing technologies for incorporation
into the standard?
Has experience shown a difference between terms negotiated
ex ante and terms negotiated ex post?
To what extent do concerns about antitrust liability deter
ex ante disclosure or negotiation of licensing terms?
What considerations should shape a rule of reason analysis
of joint ex ante license discussions or negotiations?
Instructions for Filing Public Comments
Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form. We must receive your comment by July
8, 2011. Because paper mail addressed to the FTC is subject to delay
due to heightened security screening, please consider submitting your
comments in electronic form. Comments filed in electronic form should
be submitted using the following Web link: https://ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/standardsproject (and following the
instructions on the Web-based form). To ensure that the Commission
considers an electronic comment, you must file it on the Web-based form
at the Web link: https://ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/standardsproject. If this notice appears at https://www.regulations.gov/#!home, you may also file an electronic comment through that Web site.
The Commission will consider all comments that regulations.gov forwards
to it. You may also visit the FTC Web site at https://www.ftc.gov to
read the notice and the news release describing it.
Comments should refer to ``Patent Standards Workshop, Project No.
P11-1204'' to facilitate the organization of comments. Please note that
your comment--including your name and your State--will be placed on the
public record of this proceeding, including on the publicly accessible
FTC Web site, at https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.shtm. Because
comments will be made public, they should not include any sensitive
personal information, such as any individual's Social Security Number;
date of birth; driver's license number or other State identification
number, or foreign country equivalent; passport number; financial
account number; or credit or debit card number. Comments also should
not include any sensitive health information, such as medical records
or other individually identifiable health information. In addition,
comments should not include ``trade secret or any commercial or
financial information which is obtained from any person and which is
privileged or confidential'' as provided in Section 6(f) of the Federal
Trade Commission Act (FTC Act), 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and FTC Rule
4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2). Comments containing material for which
confidential treatment is requested must be filed in paper form, must
be clearly labeled ``Confidential,'' and must comply with FTC Rule
4.9(c).\3\
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\3\ The comment must be accompanied by an explicit request for
confidential treatment, including the factual and legal basis for
the request, and must identify the specific portions of the comment
to be withheld from the public record. The request will be granted
or denied by the Commission's General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See FTC Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR
4.9(c).
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A comment filed in paper form should include the ``Patent Standards
Workshop, Project No. P11 1204'' reference both in the text and on the
envelope, and should be mailed or delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission, Office of the Secretary, Room HB113 (Annex
X), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580. The FTC is
requesting that any comment filed in paper form be sent by courier or
overnight service, if possible, because U.S. postal mail in the
Washington area and at the Commission is subject to delay due to
heightened security precautions. The FTC Act and other laws that the
Commission administers permit the collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as appropriate. The Commission will
consider all timely and responsive public comments that it receives,
whether filed in paper or electronic form. Comments received will be
available to the public on the FTC Web site, to the extent practicable,
at https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.shtm. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC Web site. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's
privacy policy, at https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.
By direction of the Commission.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011-11704 Filed 5-12-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-P