A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jan 24, 2017

Why the Federal Government Is Suing Qualcomm For Anti-Competitive Patent Licensing

In effect, Qualcomm's processor is essential for many cell phones. It is using that monopoly power to punish customers who dare to buy from competitors.

Abusing monopoly power has been illegal in the US for much of the last century, the result of which has been the flowering of what may be the greatest period of innovation in history. Whether that regimen will survive under the Trump Administration remains to be seen. JL

Joe Mullin reports in ars technica:

Qualcomm won't sell processors unless a customer takes a license to Qualcomm's standard-essential patents. And Qualcomm has refused to license its patents to competitors, which violates its commitment to license on a "fair, reasonable" basis. Qualcomm has also made exclusive deals with Apple that exclude competitors and harm competition. "Using its monopoly power to obtain elevated royalties (from) its competitors, Qualcomm collects a 'tax' on cell phone manufacturers when they use non-Qualcomm processors."
The US Federal Trade Commission has charged Qualcomm with violating the FTC Act. The feds say that Qualcomm's patent-licensing policies amount to unfair competition.
The FTC's redacted complaint (PDF), filed today, says that Qualcomm maintains a "no license, no chips" policy that forces cell phone to pay high royalties to Qualcomm.
Qualcomm is a major supplier of baseband processors, and it also licenses patents that it says are essential to widely adopted cellular standards. According to the FTC complaint, Qualcomm won't sell baseband processors unless a customer takes a license to Qualcomm's standard-essential patents, on Qualcomm's terms. And Qualcomm has refused to license its standard-essential patents to competitors, which the FTC says violates Qualcomm's commitment to license on a "fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory" or FRAND basis. Agreeing to FRAND licensing terms is required by the standard-setting organizations to which Qualcomm belongs.
According to the FTC, Qualcomm has also made exclusive deals with Apple that exclude competitors and harm competition.
"By using its monopoly power to obtain elevated royalties that apply to baseband processors supplied by its competitors, Qualcomm in effect collects a 'tax' on cell phone manufacturers when they use non-Qualcomm processors," write FTC lawyers. "This tax weakens Qualcomm's competitors, including by reducing demand for their processors, and serves to maintain Qualcomm's monopoly in baseband processor markets."The complaint, filed in federal court in San Jose, also says that when Apple "sought relief from Qualcomm's excessive royalty burden," Qualcomm laid out a condition—that Apple would exclusively use Qualcomm baseband processors in their products from 2011 to 2016. That denied anyone else who made baseband processors the chance to work with Apple, "a particularly important cell phone manufacturer."
The FTC wants a court order that would force Qualcomm to stop what it views as anti-competitive conduct. The Commission voted 2-1 to file the complaint, with Commissioner Maureen K. Ohlhausen taking the unusual step of issuing a written statement (PDF) along with her dissent. In her view, the FTC has filed a "flawed" complaint that "lacks economic and evidentiary support, that was brought on the eve of a new presidential administration, and that, by its mere issuance, will undermine US intellectual property rights in Asia and worldwide."
"The complaint fails to allege that Qualcomm charges more than a reasonable royalty," writes Commissioner Ohlhausen. "That pleading failure is no accident; it speaks to the dearth of evidence in this case."
The complaint comes just as FTC chairwoman Edith Ramirez has said she will step down in February. President-elect Donald Trump will have three vacancies to fill on the Commission. Under a Republican president, the FTC is expected to include two Democrats and three Republicans, since no more than three commissioners can be from any single party.
Qualcomm responded in a statement. It said that it has neither withheld nor threatened to withhold its chips in order to get "unfair or unreasonable licensing terms." The FTC's allegation to the contrary is wrong, according to Qualcomm, and its case is "significantly flawed."
"This is an extremely disappointing decision to rush to file a complaint on the eve of Chairwoman Ramirez’s departure and the transition to a new Administration, which reflects a sharp break from FTC practice," said Qualcomm General Counsel Dan Rosenberg. "We look forward to defending our business in federal court, where we are confident we will prevail on the merits."

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