Indian tribes look to profit from IPR sovereign immunity
When the news broke in September that pharma giant Allergan was paying a
Native American tribe millions of dollars to transfer patents and then license
them back in the hope of protecting them from inter partes review, patents were
once
again headline news in more than just the trade media. TheUniversity of
Florida pioneered the use of sovereign immunity to ring fence patents from post
issuance PTAB scrutiny, but the deals involving Allergan, a tech research entity
called SRC Labs and the Saint Regis Mohawk tribe represented a major twist in
the story. Whether it continues to be a defence used by patent owners remains to
be seen, with some judges already highly critical of the practice, but the moves
by Allergan and SRC underline the degree to which IPR has emerged as a highly
divisive issue.
FTC/Apple sue Qualcomm
Most
Qualcomm executives would presumably like to forget about the last 12 months.
The start of year saw both the Federal Trade Commission and Apple launch full
frontal assaults on the chipmaker’s patent licensing practices. The
dispute
with Apple has escalated through the course of 2017 as the two have faced off in
numerous jurisdictions. Should the iPhone giant prevail then it would have a
significant impact on one of the pioneers in wireless technology.
TC Heartland rewrites the law on venue
The pros
and cons of bringing patent suits in the Eastern District of Texas didn’t
feature in the oral arguments in TC Heartland v Kraft Foods Group Brands in the
Supreme Court in March, but there was no doubt that it would be America’s
busiest patent court that would feel the biggest impact of any chnage to the
status quo. The unanimous decision, which increased restrictions on where
plaintiffs could bring a case,had an almost immediate impact: courtrooms in East
Texas
saw the volume of new cases drop while others such as those in
Delaware saw an uptick. Once again, it was a decision from the Supreme Court
which some IP owners viewed as distinctly anti-patent.
Major
speech from DOJ antitrust chief signals change of direction on SEP
licensing
For owners of large standard essential patent (SEP)
portfolios,the use of antitrust laws to police their licensing practices has
become a major challenge. But a November speech by Makan Delrahim, the new head
of the Department of Justice’s antitrust division, signalled that the US
government was preparing for a change of tack. “I worry that we as enforcers
have strayed too far in the direction of accommodating the concerns of
technology implementers who participate in
standard setting bodies, and
perhaps risk undermining incentives for IP creators, who are entitled to an
appropriate reward for developing break-through technologies,” Delrahim told an
audience at a California law school. Any change in stance by US regulators could
have a huge impact on the monetisation landscape.
Andrei Iancu
is nominated for USPTO director
As speculation mounted around
other, more high-profile candidates, the typical response was “Andrei who?” when
it emerged that the Irell & Manella managing partner was in the running for
the top job at the USPTO. But that might well prove to have been the secret to
his successful nomination (and surely his smooth confirmation) as he comes with
few of the industry ties that dogged other contenders and hindered support for
previous incumbent ex-Google patent chief
Michelle Lee in the eyes of some.
If confirmed by the Senate (surely a matter of when, not if after a successful
appearance in front of the Judiciary Committee), Iancu has a daunting to-do list
ahead of him. His background, though, means that many are confident he will be
up to the task.
Intellectual Ventures stops buying and steps up
patent sell-off
Although it has been more muted in recent
years, Intellectual Ventures’ iconic status in the patent market means that its
April announcement that it had stopped buying assets for its third patent fund
was still hugely significant. As it invested its
first two funds, IV
dominated the secondary market building a portfolio of rights stretching into
the tens of thousands. As well as ending its buying programme, the giant NPE has
also ramped up its rate of sales including, in February, the disposal of a
portfolio of around 4,000 former Kodak patents to Dominion Harbor.
BlackBerry outsources its smartphone patent licensing
This story began in September when we broke the news that BlackBerry’s
licensing head Mark Kokes had left the business. Having been brought in to
significantly ramp up the Canadian tech giant’s monetisation activities, his
departure placed the company's ongoing commitment to monetisation in some doubt,
especially when it was followed by another senior departure in October. Instead
of bringing in a like-for-like replacement for Kokes, in November BlackBerry
made the unusual move of effectively outsourcing a big chunk of its
smartphone patent licensing to Teletry, a new entity headed by former
Ericsson CIPO Kasim Alfalahi. If Alfalahi and his team quickly start to sign
licensing deals we may see other major patent owners follow suit.
John Amster leaves RPX
It’s fair to say that
RPX has had a bumpy ride in recent years as it has struggled to grow beyond its
foundations of mitigating litigation risk for patent owning companies. In 2016
activist investor Mangrove Partners wrote a letter to the board of directors
that was sharply critical of management and demanded changes to be made. It was
still a shock however when, in another IAM exclusive in February, it emerged
that CEO John Amster had left the company following a
disagreement with the
board over his attempts to take RPX private. Amster was the only co-founder left
at the business and had played perhaps the key role in making RPX such a force
in the IP value creation market.
Provenance buys massive Nokia
portfolio Nokia
Nokia has been an active seller of patents for
some time as it has looked to rationalise its portfolio. Many of the assets
subsequently divested have ended up in the hands of NPEs,but this year the
Finnish telecoms giant took a different
approach, transferring around 12,000
rights - many of which the company had acquired through its Alcatel-Lucent
acquisition - to Provenance Asset Group, a new monetisation vehicle headed by
former AST head and RPX executive Dan
McCurdy and ex-Kodak IP executive Tim
Lynch. Their plan is to offer operating companies rights to very high quality
patents for defensive purposes, while the remaining, lower quality assets will
ultimately be sold off. Whether it succeeds or not it does at least give patent
owners a way of disposing of assets without selling to NPEs.
Big
corporate moves
It was a year in which some of the biggest
names in corporate IP value creation were on the move. Perhaps the biggest was
Allen Lo who, as we exclusively revealed in August, jumped ship from the top
patent job at Google to take the IP reins at Facebook. At the search giant Lo
oversaw a spate of value creation initiatives and so will be interesting to
follow if takes the same kind of innovative approaches in his new role.
BlackBerry also saw a change at the top as Mark Kokes, the company’s senior vice
president of IP, licensing and standards, suddenly left the business over the
summer (in another exclusive for the IAM blog). Finally, 2017 also saw Brian
Hinman step down as the CIPO at Philips, one of the premier corporate IP jobs.
Although Philips is a European company, the Hinman move makes the list here
because he is an American and has decided to head back home. Where he ends up
may well be one of the big stories of 2018.
Comment