Technical
Standardization and Standard Essential Patents
Technical standards are established
norms or requirements in regard to technical systems.
It is usually a formal document that establishes uniform engineering or technical criteria, methods,
processes and practices. In the case of Intellectual Property Rights (“IPR”), notably patents, patent holders
in the related industry may not always have the necessary means to implement
the patented technology into commercialization. If the patented technology is
crucial for the industry, initiating vast amounts of independent licensing
agreements with different implementers is not cost-efficient. Therefore
competitors or government authorities may request the patent holder to negotiate
with other players in the relevant market to achieve foundational technology
for follow-up inventions. From the current practice there are three
paths to standardization: 1) Emergence or de
facto, through fierce competition in the relevant market eventually,
creating a technical solution as dominant in the market; 2) Legal
Standardization or de jure, which is
standardization by government intervention and the regulation of technical
aspects of products 3) Standard-Setting, where standardization through industry
collaboration via standard-setting organizations (SSOs) are initiated.[1]
From these negotiations between competitors in the relevant market/industry and
patent holders a Standard Essential Patent (“SEP”) is granted to the current patent holder.
Regarding national and international
legislation, there hasn’t been any example of special provisions that regulate
Standard Essential Patents (“SEP”). Therefore a systematic interpretation from
jurisprudence, Policy Reports[2]
, Communique’s/Guidelines[3]
and general provisions (Intellectual Property, Competition and Licensing Law)
are necessary to identify potential legal dispute that may arise from SEP’s.
Advantages
of Technical Standardization and Possible Anti-Competitive Conduct of SEP
Holder
The advantages of standardization via SSOs are
creation of foundational standards that allow follow-on innovations to take
place by SEP licensing and further competition in upstream and downstream
markets, therefore the participants and competition authorities encouraged
standard-setting due to its beneficial effects. Interoperability standards
produce efficiency gains and result in tangible benefits for consumer welfare. The term ‘consumer welfare’ implies economies of
scale, cost savings, and gains in productivity and efficiency.[4]
Standardization ensures interoperability of standard-based products. It renders
these products more comparable for consumers and can help to select the ‘best’
available technical solution for a given task.[5]
New opportunities for manufacturers and consumers, particularly in the fields
of telecommunications and software-implemented inventions will also become
available that rely on foundational technologies. Without standards, devices
would need to have to rely on additional connectors, plugs and converters from
various manufacturers, increasing cost and decreasing functionality of the
devices.
However, possible shortcomings from
technical standardization may occur, that can have anti-competitive effect on
the market. By obtaining a standard, the SEP holder creates a risk of locking
in the market in its ecosystem and violation competition. The lock-in effect
causes even greater risk in markets, where network effects are present and the value
of the product or technology increases with the number of other persons using
it, building an interconnected ecosystem. The SEP holder may prohibit the
further use of the protected technology, impose unfair licensing agreements and
even force competitors out of the market via anticompetitive conduct.[6]Investigations
at the National Competition Boards and/or possible litigation may come into
play for SEP infringement or licensing disputes to prevent further
anti-competitive conduct. In that case, the investigating authority may
initiate compulsory licenses.
Compulsory Licenses: Patent ownership
grants the rightsholder a monopoly right to use its technology, within the 20 years’
period, exclusively. However, if certain conditions by law are met SEP holder
is required to license the patent to third parties, without its consent, and
oblige to the third party request for licensing. Compulsory licensing, as an
exception to freedom to contract, is defined by law in the Turkish Industrial
Property Act/Sınai Mülkiyet Kanunu (“SMK”)
Art.129 and regarding abuse of dominant power by the SEP holder, SMK Art.
129(e) protects implementers against anti-competitive or restrictive behavior
by rightsholder.[7] ,
which derive from European Patent Convention (“EPC”) Art.38 under the same framework. The ratio legis of SMK and EPC are in compliance with the EU
Competition Law and aims to protect the public welfare with the use of the
patented technology.[8]
Abuse
of Dominant Power
Four types of anti-competitive conduct from
abuse of dominant power, under Treaty on the Functioning of European Union (“TTFEU”) Art 102 and Turkish Act on
Protection of Competition/Rekabetin
Korunması Kanunu (“RKHK”) Art.6,
exist with regards to unilateral conduct of an SEP holder: Refusal to license,
Patent ambush, Patent hold-up and Patent hold-out.
Patent Hold-up and Patent Hold-Out: These
opportunistic mechanisms by the SEP holder, are a result of excessive licensing
fees of the standard-essential patent SEP holder, once standard is implemented (patent
hold-up). The visa verse may also occur by standard implementer, where a
SEP holder exploits a licensee’s costs to switch away from the related standard
as a means of obtaining royalties above the Fair, Reasonable, and Non-Discriminatory
(“FRAND”) level (patent hold-out).[9]
Refusal to license: Freedom to contract is,
by law, a right by SEP holder and other parties. However, freedom to contract
can be restricted by law if the SEP holder, as a dominant player in the
relevant market, refuses to license its patent to implementers with an
intention to distort the market (ex: entry barriers).[10]
Patent Ambush: “Intentional deceptive
conduct in the context of the standard-setting process by not disclosing the
existence of the patents and patent applications which it later claimed were
relevant to the adopted standard. Such behavior is known as a patent ambush.”[11]
Licensing
Agreements and FRAND Terms
Standardization agreements are again problematic
under Art 101(1) TFEU and RKHK Art.4 (prohibition of anticompetitive conduct,
a.k.a cartel agreements). The reason is that any agreement to standardize
technology eliminates competition between alternative technologies. However, EU
competition law also acknowledges that standards are necessary and, on balance,
beneficial. The conditions set out by the European Commission in the Horizontal
Cooperation Agreements Guidelines[12],
are that these standards must remain open. Accordingly, SSOs must ensure
effective access to the standards on FRAND terms. This openness becomes a
problem if a patent needs to be used to comply with a SEP. As a result, SSOs
typically require their members to make a declaration that they will grant
licenses for their SEPs on FRAND conditions.[13]
The meeting point of the interests of
contributors and users of the standard is FRAND licensing, based on a
commitment to make a standardized technology available on fair, reasonable and
non-discriminatory terms. FRAND commitment ensures that standards will remain
accessible and implementation unrestricted. “The FRAND commitment ensures
implementers that they will not fall victim to opportunistic conduct by SEP
holders; have access to third-party technologies on reasonable terms that allow
profitable implementation of the standard; and that they will not be
discriminated against their downstream competitors.[14]
As a side note, technical standardization,
in the sense of obtaining an SEP, does not necessarily make the SEP owner a
dominant player in the relevant market. While SEP owner, in patent law theory,
has the right to permit or prohibit use and block the entire market; standards
may arise within a shorter timeframe than expected.[15]
Additionally, manufacturing and
commercialization capacities of the SEP holder will be the determent to address
antitrust measures, where the standard users capacity to challenge infringers
via legal action is a parameter to bring competition law into the discussion.[16]
Summary
and Further Discussions
The technical standardization requirement
for different industries is becoming more essential with the need for more
interoperability between devices and services. Monopolist behavior of the SEP holder,
costly and time consuming infringement litigation and unfair licensing terms
that break FRAND negotiations can lead to sunk costs for investors; leading to
an innovative decadence in the relevant market and industry. As stated above,
the SEP may not ipso facto lead to
anti-competitive conduct. Standards are particularly crucial for emerging
technologies, that require the foundations of prior art to have a disruptive
effect in the sector. University-industry collaborations, start-ups and technology
transfer offices often rely on standardized technology (wireless
telecommunications, computer-implemented inventions, etc.) to draw the
attention of venture capital and other investors.
The main focus of the advocacy relies on
pre-license negotiation bargaining power between SEP holder and implementer, as
well as SSO’s procedural tools to arbitrate in SEP disputes in an unbiased
setting. While certain jurisdictions (EU, UK, US) do have experience in SEP
litigation and legislative foundations, often the complex nature of the dispute
require technical analysis and alternative dispute resolution. Quoting from a recent
WIPO Magazine opinion on the current philosophy behind the technical standards:
“SEPs, FRAND, injunctions and license terms are not just legal issues; they
involve well-informed business strategies and competitive decisions. Decision
makers familiar with these developments, both the converged views and continued
divergence, may be able to reduce transaction costs and come to
mutually-agreeable FRAND terms based on their own unique circumstances.”[17]
Author:Sinan Erkan
[1] Tsilikas Haris, Huawei v. ZTE in Context –
EU Competition Policy and Collaborative Standardization in Wireless
Telecommunications (2017) 152; Maume Philipp, Huawei ./. ZTE, or, how the CJEU
closed the Orange Book Queen Mary Journal of Intellectual Property, Vol. 6 No.
2 (2016)217
[2]
Chryssoula Pentheroudakis, Justus A. Baron (2017) Licensing Terms of
Standard Essential Patents. A Comprehensive Analysis of Cases. JRC Science for
Policy Report. EUR 28302 EN; doi:10.2791/32230
[3] European
Commission, Setting out the EU approach to Standard Essential Patents, Brussels,
29.11.2017 COM(2017) 712, available at: https://ec.europa.eu/docsroom/documents/26583
[4] Tsilikas,n.(1) 152
[5] Picht, Peter Georg, “Standard-essential
patents: limiting exclusivity for the sake of innovation in Drex, Josef
and Sanders,Anselm Kamperman (eds.), The
Innovation Society and Intellectual Property, European Intellectual
Property Institutes Network Series Edward Elgar Publishing (2019) 208
[6]Picht in Drexl and Sanders,(n.4) 209
[7] Berkay Ergün, Zorunlu Standard Patent(SEP) Bağlamında Hâkim
Durumun Kötüye Kullanılması, Seçkin Yayınları (2020) 24
[8] Ibid. 25
[9] Picht in Drexl and Sanders,(n.4) 209
[10] Ergün(n.6) 67
[11] Patent ambush in
standard-setting: the Commission accepts commitments from Rambus to lower
memory chip royalty rates Ruben Schellingerhout and Piero Cavicch https://ec.europa.eu/competition/publications/cpn/2010_1_11.pdf (2010) 33; see also Case
COMP/38.636 – RAMBUS, where the term was addressed and hereinafter became a
novel terminology in SEP litigation.
[12] Guidelines on the
applicability of Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
Union to horizontal co-operation agreement OJ C 11, 14.1.2011
[13] Maume, (n.1). 218
[14] Tsilikas, (n.1) 157
[15]Picht in Drexl and Sanders,(n.4) 212
[16] This statement and
further case law will be concretized in the next chapter ‘Standard Essential
Patents II National Jurisprudence (EU,US, Turkey) and Current Developments
[17] Johnson Hines, Doris and Yang, Ming-Tao,
“Worldwide activities on licensing issues relating to standard essential
patents”, WIPO Magazine (2019), available at: https://www.wipo.int/wipo_magazine/en/2019/01/article_0003.html