FTC Finds Patent Holder's Refusal to Honor Licensing Agreements on Technology Adopted by Standard Setting Organization Unlawful
Businesses that participate in Standard Setting Organizations ("SSOs") and seek adoption of their technologies in standards now arguably face additional exposures. Extending a line of previous SSO patent "hold-up" cases, including Dell, Unocal, and Rambus, the Federal Trade Commission has used its most recent SSO case to define a broader potential scope for liability under Section 5 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45. The zone of liability now includes businesses that do not conceal their patents before SSO adoption, but later engage in "hold-up" behaviors after adoption – "ex ante," by trying to reneg on previously negotiated agreements with an SSO about the future economic terms on which the patent would be licensed if they were included in the standard. According to at least a majority of the current FTC, the Act now appears to encompass such actions by corporations with questionable market power, and also provides the basis for additional liability under the consumer protection provisions of the Act as well as unfair competition.
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