not like they are going to sue google, the h.264 consortium will. the consortium is its own organization with its own budget
apple was in negotiations to license it
under FRAND rules you have to license the patents for a few pennies per device or the same rate to everyone. competitors included
Apple invented the modern smartphone, and they deserve to be paid for it.
You should note that Moto offered the same licensing terms to Apple, who called them 'unfair'. Apple needs special treatment, and deserves to get better licensing deals at cheaper prices. Because iDevices are magical.
I don't even...
You should note that Moto offered the same licensing terms to Apple, who called them 'unfair'. Apple needs special treatment, and deserves to get better licensing deals at cheaper prices. Because iDevices are magical.
But apparently not enough, as they have tried to seek an injunction against Samsung.
All the iPhone patents need to be in a FRAND-ish arrangement, and Apple should get royalties for them and nothing else.
2.25% of the final $599 price tag is "fair"? That's nuts.
It is to those who blindly hate apple.
Why stick specifically to Apple. When Dyson first came out and filed a patent, Hoover should be able to fork over pennies on the dollar to be able to use the technology and essentially wipe Dyson out, right?
You earn your patent and it's your responsibility to defend your patent.
That's what Motorola is doing. Defending their patents. Apple wants to fork over pennies on the dollar on Motorola's patents and use their technology, while they sue around the world to wipe Motorola out.
Yes, asking Apple to pay money to license their patent (required by everyone using a specific global standard and thus being FRAND) is defending a patent. Asking Apple to pay an unfair price is asking for a lawsuit. 😛
There's a big difference between a standard setting patent and other patents. You don't HAVE to license your regular patents to other people. However if you want to be part of a standard setting organization where you convince everyone in the world to build a platform that uses your patents, you're obligated to license it out for a fair price.
Who says it's an unfair price? Motorola is offering same price to Microsoft too.
How much does Apple want for its patents?
They don't want anything for their patents. They want companies to stop infringing on them. Unlike FRAND patents, apple doesn't have any obligation to license them. I feel like we have all been over this ad nauseum. I also feel like you already knew the answer to this question. You may think this is unfair but apple is well within their rights. Motorola, with their 3G patent, is not.
They are well within their rights as well. FRAND doesn't mean free. Apple has to license those patents to not be infringing on them.
It's also possible that Apple's current Qualcomm-equipped products do not infringe the patent due to "patent exhaustion"in other words, Qualcomm's license to the patent very likely covers Apple's use of its chips.
Qualcomm supposedly had already licensed all of the patents. Why should apple pay again?
That's like music companies asking you to pay for the songs that you hear in commercials on TV. The creator of the commercial already licensed the song, why should I pay?
If Qualcomm is licensed, they shouldn't have to pay. If it's not, they should.
Agreed. They should pay no more than any other company licensing the same patent.
You can say that it is within Apple's right to not allow other companies to license iPhone related patents, but when they are so aggressive about defending the patents it hurts consumers who should have other options in the modern smartphone market besides Apple. Heck, that is the point of things like FRAND- to allow innovators to get paid while allowing the industry to move forward.
Why stick specifically to Apple. When Dyson first came out and filed a patent, Hoover should be able to fork over pennies on the dollar to be able to use the technology and essentially wipe Dyson out, right?
That's why there are FRAND patents, to keep the industry moving. Patents that aren't FRAND, the company has the right to not license them. If you expect Apple to license their patents then why just not make everything FRAND?