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anatomy of a patent thicket
Here you see how all the overlapping claims make intellectual property unmanageable.
Heingartner, Douglas. 2007. "Patent Fights Are a Legacy of MP3.s Tangled Origins."
New York Times (5 March).
"The confusion stems from the number of companies and institutions -- including
Thomson, Royal Philips Electronics and AT&T (through Bell Labs, now part of
Alcatel-Lucent) -- that worked to create the MP3 standard almost two decades ago.
The patent claims of those and others are increasingly being backed up by aggressive
enforcement efforts, including lawsuits and even seizures of music players by
customs authorities."
"Until now, the most prominent holder of MP3 patents has been the Fraunhofer Society
of Germany, which was founded in 1949 and has become Europe.s largest applied
research organization. The division that helped develop MP3, the Fraunhofer
Institute for Integrated Circuits, earns millions of dollars a year in licensing
fees from software makers like Microsoft, which incorporates the format into its
Windows Media Player, and from music player manufacturers like Apple. The payments
-- typically $2,500 for a video game, or $2 a unit for music players -- are
administered for Fraunhofer by the French electronics firm Thomson, which also
played a role in the early development of MP3."
The Web site of the Fraunhofer: "Its detailed online history of MP3 portrays the
format as an outgrowth of German university research in the 1970s, when German
engineers began working on audio compression. One of Fraunhofer.s leading audio
engineers, Karlheinz Brandenburg, is frequently referred to in the German media as
the father of MP3, a title he dismisses."
"But Alcatel-Lucent, which won the court judgment against Microsoft last month, has
its own version of that history. It says Bell Labs (whose patent rights Alcatel
acquired when it bought Lucent Technologies last year) was the main creative engine
behind what went on to become the MP3 standard. .A common misunderstanding is that
Fraunhofer invented MP3,. said John M. Desmarais, the lead lawyer in the Microsoft
case for Alcatel-Lucent, which is based in Paris. Though Fraunhofer was involved in
the research that led to the MP3 standard issued in 1993, he said, .Bell Labs had
already developed the fundamental technology. in the mid-1980s, .before Fraunhofer
even came on the scene. .... .MP3 has a lot of parts to it,. and .two of the key
parts are owned by Bell Laboratories,. he said, but .that doesn.t mean that other
people don.t have an ownership interest"..
"The group that made the MP3 standard official is the International Organization for
Standardization, or ISO, a nongovernmental group based in Geneva that sets
specifications for items as diverse as shipping containers and dashboard indicators.
One of its many internal bodies is the Moving Picture Experts Group, or MPEG, a team
of industry specialists established in 1988 to standardize digital multimedia
formats."
"Many proposals were submitted for the first standard for audio and video
compression, called MPEG-1, which was completed in 1992 and formally published in
several parts in 1993. The chosen proposals included Musicam (also known as MPEG-1
Audio Layer 2, a format used in digital broadcasting) and Aspec, which went on to
become the basis for MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, now called MP3."
"Several companies -- including the Dutch electronics giant Philips -- claim patent
rights to Musicam, and by extension, to a piece of MP3. .In the case of MP3, it is
very clear that this was not developed only by AT&T, Fraunhofer and Thomson, because
it was based upon Musicam,. said Leon van de Kerkhof, a program manager at Philips
Applied Technologies who was also a crucial member of the MPEG group at its
inception."
"A spokeswoman for Thomson, Martine Esquirou, acknowledged that Fraunhofer and
Thomson were not the only holders of MP3-related patents. .We.re not involved in
this patent dispute between Microsoft and Alcatel-Lucent,. she said by e-mail.
.Thomson has not and does not license the patents in question"..
"Thomson.s licensing program, she said, is based on 20 separate patent families that
.cover at least part of. the MPEG specifications. Thomson licenses these patents to
more than 400 hardware and software companies."
"Muddling matters more, many of the companies on Thomson.s list of licensees,
including Apple, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia and Samsung, also pay for additional MP3
licenses from Sisvel, an Italian company whose American subsidiary is called Audio
MPEG."
"According to Sisvel, the MP3 patents it represents (on behalf of companies
including Philips and France Telecom) are .compulsory for complying with the ISO
standard.. Sisvel has aggressively enforced these patents -- for example, by having
German customs authorities confiscate SanDisk MP3 players from the SanDisk booth at
a German trade fair last September. In 2005, Sisvel sued Thomson over licensing
fees for MP3 patents that Sisvel said Thompson had stopped paying; they quickly
settled."
"In February, a little-known company called Texas MP3 Technologies also entered the
fray, suing Apple, Samsung and SanDisk for infringement of what it said were its
rightful MP3 patents."
--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929
Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com
- Thread context:
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Jim Devine Tue 06 Mar 2007, 14:21 GMT
- just-in-time imperialism?,
Michael Perelman Tue 06 Mar 2007, 03:15 GMT
- anatomy of a patent thicket,
Michael Perelman Tue 06 Mar 2007, 02:26 GMT
- Bahrain's Shia Majority,
Yoshie Furuhashi Tue 06 Mar 2007, 00:33 GMT
- White suprmecist gang,
Charles Brown Mon 05 Mar 2007, 22:59 GMT
- The names change, but the tactics are legacy,
Leigh Meyers Mon 05 Mar 2007, 20:08 GMT
- Fwd: Check out "Mortgage Lender Implode-o-meter" page,
Jim Devine Mon 05 Mar 2007, 19:33 GMT
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