FTC Highlights SEP Antitrust Abuses
The recent remarks of FTC Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter on standards essential patents (“SEPs”) are commendable, as is her emphasis on the role antitrust law plays in curtailing anticompetitive abuses of them. The abuses Slaughter highlights mostly impact small- and medium-sized businesses, “the ‘little engines that could’ of our economy,” who lack the resources to navigate complex legal issues and are “more likely to cave to supra-FRAND rates out of fear of exclusion.” Patents do not grant companies a free pass to abuse their dominant market positions through anticompetitive means.
Commissioner Slaughter emphasized that patents are not—and cannot become—an absolute shield for anti-competitive conduct by SEP holders: “When patent holders obtain market power by virtue of being included in standards, the way they exercise that market power is not immunized from the antitrust laws merely because patents are involved.” Specifically, owners of SEPs are obligated to license their patents to willing licensees on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (“FRAND”) terms, and U.S. antitrust policy plays an important role in policing those matters.
Clear antitrust policies are imperative to ensure sincere FRAND licensing practices. Without definite antitrust policies, SEPs can skirt FRAND requirements, leading to “holdup,” or the practice of prohibiting businesses from implementing technologies that implement standards unless they agree to higher royalties and more unfavorable licensing terms than the SEP owner could have obtained before the standard was set, when alternative technologies were available.
Commissioner Slaughter identified three examples of holdup evincing anticompetitive conduct: (1) refusing to license a SEP to any willing licensee in violation of a FRAND commitment, (2) conditioning an SEP license on taking or giving a cross-license to non-essential patents or that are SEPs of unrelated standards (i.e., bundling), and (3) requiring a license to a portfolio where some or all of the patents are not even identified, let alone provided with the relevant information needed by a potential licensee to assess whether the patents under negotiation are valid, enforceable, and essential to the standard’s implementation, or offered on non-discriminatory terms.
This disproportionately affects small businesses, who lack the bargaining power to negotiate with SEP owners and the resources to defend against SEP assertions. Theoretically, federal judges occasionally enforce FRAND terms in patent cases, but as Commissioner Slaughter pointed out, that case needs to first get to court and continue on to a point to reach such a decision, and “if small and medium entities are agreeing to supra-FRAND terms because they are afraid of the threat of exclusion after litigation, there necessarily will not be a high volume of cases challenging licensing demands.”
Commissioner Slaughter also underscored the role that standards-developing organizations, or SDOs, have in setting policies that would facilitate licensing and prevent inefficient litigation. SDOs can institute policies that mitigate the harms of holdup by mandating commitments from participants to disclose and/or license standard-essential patents on FRAND terms. SDO policies can also clarify how a reasonable rate may be determined. For example, SDOs may specify a narrow set of circumstances in which injunctive or other exclusionary relief may be an appropriate remedy for “holdout,” i.e., when a potential licensee unilaterally refuses to take a license or unreasonably delays in doing so.[1]
Commissioner Slaughter’s message that “antitrust laws have an important role to play in the standard-setting context, including conduct related to the use or abuse of SEPs” is laudable. The application of antitrust law in congruence with sound SDO policies to promote “widespread and efficient licensing” at “actual FRAND rates” can reward genuine innovation while also preventing abuses by SEP holders, including assertion of poor-quality, SEP-questionable patents.
[1] As Commissioner Slaughter pointed out, absent collusion, holdout does not pose the same concerns from an antitrust standpoint as holdup, which has the potential to exclude firms from implementing a standard and hurting customer choice among competitors. While competition and consumers are harmed indefinitely when market power is exploited to engage in holdup, there are remedies for holdout.