Standards, Patents and Policy (Public and Private) Tim Simcoe, University of Toronto Marc Rysman, Boston University
Note : From pooled sample of 13 SSOs, within SSO trends are all positive. Increasing IPR Disclosure
Potential Explanations Policy changes (patents & antitrust) Demand for standards (Internet) Demonstration effects (Dell and Rambus) Vertical dis-integration Open innovation (R&D outsourcing) => Greater reliance on technology input market => Higher stakes standard-setting process Is it becoming harder to “cooperate on standards and compete on implementation?”
Some Facts About Disclosed Patents Overwhelmingly ICT patents Raw litigation probabilities SSO Patent9.7 percent “Average” Patent0.7 percent Selection vs. disclosure Disclosure => citation boost Network effects & technological significance Disclosure => litigation boost 8% go to jury vs. 2% for all litigated patents
The Hold-up Problem Standards => coordinated investments Sunk costs : NRE, learning, installed base Patent-holders can capture “quasi-rents” Threat to markets and SSO reputation SSO Policy : Disclosure with RAND licensing Careful screening of proposals (F)RAND is a meaningless promise Difficult counterfactuals Adjudicating reasonable prices Contractual solution : Ex ante negotiation Firms worry : Thickets, submarines, validity, inertia SSOs worry : Antitrust (private suits), worse screening Adjudication, Legislation, Guidance (VITA Letter)
A NAASTy Alternative to RAND Non-Assertion After Specified Time Unrestricted pricing, followed by royalty-free license Royalty-free (Time=0) vs. RAND (Time=patent-life) Benefits No price negotiation Solves antitrust & engineering problems Easy to adjudicate Implementation Incentives Innovation Incentives Costs NAASTy prices Mimics underlying patent system
One Size Does Not Fit All Institutions evolve SDOs => consortia => open-source Private policy experiments RAND, Ex ante, GPL, NAAST? A role for public policy SSOs lack enforcement power Coordination “in the shadow of” public policy Active roles Consumer, “vendor neutral” participant, sponsor…
Backup Slides
(F)RAND is not Working Ambiguity (F)RAND is a meaningless promise Extremely difficult counterfactuals Adjudicating “reasonable” prices Economic regulation Smythe vs. Ames Homogenous goods / administrative expertise Collusion cases Addyston Pipe & Steel “Setting sail on a sea of doubt” Patent infringement Georgia Pacific Exception that proves the rule (Shapiro & Lemley 2006) Patent Awards
Implementing NAAST Monopoly pricing for how long? That’s a good question… When to start the clock? Start vs. end of SSO process Incentive to move fast : patent-holders vs. vendors SSO Participation Same as RAND with teeth (W3C) What about “trolls”? Separate issue