Arbitration of FRAND Disputes in SEP Licensing

Written By

richard vary module
Richard Vary

Partner
UK

I specialise in patent disputes in the technology and communications industry.

High-technology products today usually contain standardised technology. Cellular wireless connectivity is one example: standards include the fourth-generation ‘LTE’ standard or the third-generation ‘UMTS’ standard. Developed originally for mobile phones, cellular wireless is found today in cars, smart meters, factories, trains and drones. Wi-Fi is another example of standardised connectivity technology, specified by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers’ 802 series of standards. Video encoding is a third example, with standards including H.264 and H.265.

These standardised technologies are developed not by a single company, but by groups of companies that collaborate through standards developing organisations (SDOs). Engineers from the companies will meet and agree on technological solutions to be adopted in the standard. Often these meetings identify technical problems to be overcome. The solutions identified by the participating engineers to these problems may be novel, and inventive, and therefore eligible for patent protection. The companies involved may file patent applications and end up with a portfolio of patents that cover some of the technology in the standard. An implementer of the standard, wishing to build and sell a device that uses the technology, must take a licence to those patents.

SDOs typically have intellectual property right (IPR) policies. These policies set the terms on which participants in the standards development…

Full article available on PatentHub

Latest insights

More Insights
featured image

Patent Litigation in Practice Series: Spotlight on Australia - Preliminary discovery in patent disputes

4 minutes May 29 2025

Read More
featured image

First UPC decision on Second Medical Use

2 minutes May 28 2025

Read More
featured image

Report of Trade Mark Cases For the CIPA Journal April 2025

1 minute May 20 2025

Read More