Preserving the Royalty-Free Standards Ecosystem

Jorge L. Contreras, Rudi N.A. Bekkers, C. Bradford Biddle, Enrico Bonadio, Michael A. Carrier, Bernard Chao, Charles Duan, Richard Gilbert, Joachim Henkel, Erik Hovenkamp, Martin Husovec, Kai Jakobs, Dong-hyu Kim, Mark A. Lemley, Brian J. Love, Luke McDonagh, Fiona Scott Morton, Jason Schultz, Timothy Simcoe, Jennifer M. UrbanJoy Xiang

Research output: Working paperProfessional

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Abstract

It has long been recognized in Europe and elsewhere that standards-development organizations (SDOs) may adopt policies that require their participants to license patents essential to the SDO’s standards (standards-essential patents or SEPs) to manufacturers of standardized products (“implementers”) on a royalty-free (RF) basis.1 This requirement contrasts with SDO policies that permit SEP holders to charge implementers monetary patent royalties, sometimes on terms that are specified as “fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory” (FRAND). As demonstrated by two decades of intensive litigation around the world, FRAND royalties have given rise to intractable disputes regarding the manner in which such royalties should be calculated and adjudicated. In contrast, standards distributed on an RF basis are comparatively free from litigation and the attendant transaction costs.2 Accordingly, numerous SDOs around the world have adopted RF licensing policies and many widely adopted standards, including Bluetooth, USB, IPv6, HTTP, HTML and XML, are distributed on an RF basis. This note briefly discusses the commercial considerations surrounding RF standards, the relationship between RF standards and open source software (OSS) and the SDO policy mechanisms – including “universal reciprocity” -- that enable RF licensing to succeed in the marketplace.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationCalifornia
PublisherUniversity of Southern California
Number of pages8
VolumeUSC Law Legal Studies Paper
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2022

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