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UNITED STATES INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. In the Matter of CERTAIN 3G MOBILE HANDSETS AND COMPONENTS THEREOF Inv. No. 337-TA-613 (REMAND) WRITTEN SUBMISSION ON THE PUBLIC INTEREST OF FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION CHAIRWOMAN EDITH RAMIREZ

As Chairwoman of the United States Federal Trade Commission, I submit this statement in response to the United States International Trade Commission s Notice of Request for Written Submissions in Investigation No. 337-TA-613 (Remand). 1 This investigation raises an important and unresolved question for the ITC: what standard should the ITC use to evaluate evidence concerning patent hold-up when a complainant seeks an exclusion order for alleged infringement of a FRAND-encumbered standard essential patent? 2 I recommend that, as part of its public interest analysis before issuing an exclusion order, 3 the ITC require a SEP holder to prove that the implementer is unwilling or unable to take a FRAND license. 4 This standard would ensure that an exclusion order issues only when it would not facilitate patent hold-up and thus only when such an order would be consistent with the public interest. It would also establish a balanced approach to ITC remedies by ensuring that a SEP holder follows through with its FRAND licensing commitment, while at the same time 1 The views reflected in this statement are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or of any other Commissioner. I take no position on the facts of Investigation No. 337-T A- 613 (Remand), or whether Section 337 remedies should issue. ~ The threat of an exclusion order or other injunctive relief against a willing licensee "has the potential to distort competition by enabling SEP owners to negotiate high royalty rates and other favorable tenns, after a standard is adopted. that they could not c redibly demand beforehand.'' Third-Party U.S. Fed. Trade Comm'n's Statement on the Public Interest at 2, Certain Wireless Commc' ns Devices, Inv. No. 337-TA-745 (ltc fi led June 6, 20 12) [hereinafter 2012 FTC Statement]. This is commonly known as "patent hold-up." The standard recommended in this statement would also address concerns about "reverse hold-up... Reverse hold-up reflects the potential for a standards implementer to engage in, for example. a ' constructive refusal to negotiate a FRAND license with the SEP holder or refusal to pay \\'hat has been determined to be a FRAND royalty.'' Letter from Ambassador Michael B.G. Froman. U.S. Trade Rep., to the Hon. Irving A. Williamson, Chairman, U.S. lnfl Trade Comm n at 2 (Aug. 3. 2013) [hereinafter Ambassador Froman Letter]. 3 The ITC has a statutory obligation to consider, among other things, "competitive conditions in the United States economy... and United States consumers" and refrain fi om issuing Section 337 remedies that arc not in the public interest. 19 U.S.C. 1337( d)( I), (f)( I). 4 This statement uses the tenns FRAND and RAND interchangeably. 2

recognizing that both the SEP holder and the standards implementer have a duty to negotiate in good faith towards a meaningful resolution of FRAND issues. 5 I. Consistent with Ambassador Froman's 2013 instruction that the ltc should make explicit findings on hold-up and reverse hold-up "to the maximum extent possible,'' 6 the ltc issued a remand order on March 24, 2014 directing the Administrative Law Judge to "take evidence concerning and/or briefing on whether there is patent hold-up or reverse hold-up in this investigation.'' 7 The ALJ held an evidentiary hearing and issued an Initial Determination on Remand in April 2015, concluding "that there is no evidence of hold-up, that there is evidence of reverse hold-up, and that [the] public interest does not preclude issuance of an exclusion order.'' 8 In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ held that the implementer carries the burden of establishing the existence of patent hold-up and found that "'there is no evidence that [the patent 5 To mitigate the threat of patent hold-up, standard setting organizations often seek FRAND licensing commitments from SEP holder patticipants, often as a quid pro quo for incorporating their patented technology in the standard. See Microsoft C01p. v. Motorola, Inc., No. C 10-1823, 20 13 WL 2111217, at *6 (W.D. Wash. Apr. 25, 20 13) ("'In order to reduce the likelihood that owners of [standard) essential patents will abuse their market power, many standard setting organizations, including the IEEE and ITU, have adopted rules relating to the disclosure and licensing of essential patents. The policies often require or encourage members of the standards setting organizations to identify patents that are essential to a proposed standard and to agree to license their essential patents on reasonable and non-discriminatory ("'RAN D.. ) terms to anyone who requests a license. Such rules help to ensure that standards do not allow essential patent owners to extort their competitors or prevent competitors fi om entering the marketplace... ): see also Broad com Corp. 1'. Qualcomm Inc., 50 I F.3d 297, 314 (3d Cir. 2007) (commenting that lock-in creates the potential for anticompetitive effects and that.. [i]t is in such circumstances that measures such as FRAND commitments become important safeguards against monopoly power'' (citing Daniel G. Swanson & William J. Baumol, Reasonahlc> and Nondiscriminatory (RAND) Royalties. Swndards Selection, and Co11trol of Market Poll'er, 73 ANTITRUST L.J. I. 5. I 0-I I (2005))). 6 Ambassador Froman Letter at 3. 7 Revised Notice ofcomm'n Determination to Remand Investigation to the Chief Admin. L. Judge at 4, Certain 3G Mobile Handsets, Inv. No. 337-TA-613 (Remand) (ITC Mar. 24, 2014). 8 Initial Detennination on Remand at ii & 69, Certain 3G Mobile Handsets, Inv. No. 337-TA-613 (Remand) (ltc Apr. 27, 2015). 3

holder] has violated its duty of good faith, or tried for[] patent hold-up.'' 9 According to the ALI, a SEP holder may comply with its FRAND commitment simply by offering to license its SEPseven on terms that may not be FRAND. 10 Also critical to the ALJ's finding of no hold-up was the fact that throughout the parties' dispute, the SEP holder had continued to negotiate. 11 That fact, coupled with a lack of evidence from respondents as to what the FRAND rate would be, led the ALI to conclude the SEP holder had satisfied its FRAND obligations. 12 On June 25, 2015, the ITC determined to review the RID's public interest findings, among other findings, and invited interested government agencies to file written submissions on the issues of remedy, the public interest, and bonding. 13 I submit this statement because I respectfully disagree with the reasoning and standard applied by the ALI to determine whether an exclusion order for infringement of a FRAND-encumbered SEP would be in the public interest. II. In my view, as the party that has made a commitment to license on FRAND tenns and is nonetheless seeking an exclusion order, the SEP holder should have the burden of establishing that the putative licensee is unwilling or unable to take a license on FRAND te1ms. 14 Fmther, the ltc should not regard as dispositive of the factual issue of hold-up the fact that a SEP holder has continued to negotiate with an implementer even after filing a complaint with the ITC. 9!d. at 44, 48-49. 10!d. at 41 (concluding that even if a SEP holder's offers do not meet the FRAND requirement," they nonetheless demonstrate that the SEP holder "was trying to reach a licensing agreement''). II /d. 12!d. at 43-46. 1. 1 Notice ofcomm'n Decision to Review in Paii a Final Initial Determination on Remand; Request for Writlen Submissions at 4, 6, Certain 3G Mobile Handsets, Inv. No. 337-TA-613 (Remand) (ITC June 25, 20 15). 14 I believe that an IPR policy is instructive, but not dispositive, on the question of whether an exclusion order is in the public interest. 4

Reasonableness cannot be presumed merely from the fact of negotiations. Any negotiation that takes place after initiation of a Section 337 investigation occurs under the threat of an exclusion order. Because implementers are often locked into practicing the relevant standard, this threat may lead to a license on terms that reflect not only.. the value conferred by the patent itself' but also the.. additional value-the hold-up value" conferred by the patent's incorporation into the standard. 15 The threat may be particularly outsized where the asserted SEP relates to a small component of a complex multi component product and the SEP holder seeks exclusion of the entire product. 16 The AU' s decision to place the burden of proving patent hold-up on the respondent was based on his view that the prospect of hold-up is remote and unlikely to occur. 17 But the danger that bargaining conducted in the shadow of an exclusion order will lead to patent hold-up is real. For example, in Microsoft Corp. v. Motorola, Inc., Motorola sought to exclude Microsoft's gaming consoles from the United States and demanded that Microsoft pay royalties between $6-8 per console. 18 The court determined that the RAND rate was 3.471 cents per unit for the 802.11 standard and 0.555 cents per unit for the H.264 standard. 19 Similarly, in Realtek 15 Apple, Inc. l '. Motorola, Inc., 869 F. Supp. 2d 901, 913 (N.D. Ill. 20 12), af('d in part and rev 'd and vacated in part, 757 F.3d 1286 (Fed. Cir. 2014); Fed. Trade Comm'n. The Evolving IP Marketplace: Aligning Patent Notice and Remedies with Competition at 21-23 (20 11 ), amilahle at http://www.ftc.gov/os/20 11/03/ 11 0307patentreport.pdf; see also Carl Shapiro, Injunctions, Hold-Up, and Patent Royalties, 12 AM. L. & ECON. REV. 280 (2010); Mark Lemley & Carl Shapiro, Patent Holdup and Royalzr Stacking, 85 TE:\. L. REV. 1991, 1992-93 (2007) ("[T]he threat of an injunction can enable a patent holder to negotiate royalties far in excess of the patent holder's true economic contribution. Such royalty overcharges act as a tax on new products incorporating the patented technology, thereby impeding rather than promoting innovation."). I< 2012 FTC Statement at 3; Lemley & Shapiro, supra note 15, at I 992-93. 17 Certain 3G Mobile Handsets, Inv. No. 33 7-T A-6 13 (Initial Determination on Remand at 43-44, 61 (April27, 2015) [hereinafter RID] ("[Since 2011) the IP community has been vigilant and has kept a watchful eye on the ITC to ensure that patent holdup was not occuning. The result has been not a single case of holdup has been noted."). 18 Microsoft Corp., 2013 WL 2 I I I 2 17, at *99. 19!d. at *85, 100. 5

Semiconductor Corp. v. LSI Corp., LSI, after filing an ITC action seeking an exclusion order, offered to license Realtek its SEPs in exchange for a royalty that exceeded the selling price of Realtek 's standard-compliant products. 20 A federal district com1, after enjoining LSI from pursuing an exclusion order, determined that the cumulative RAND royalty for the patents at issue was 0.19% of the selling price. 21 Consequently, when the ITC is deciding whether to issue an exclusion order before FRAND terms are set, 22 it should require the complainant to prove that the respondent is unwilling or unable to take a license on FRAND tetms. 23 This will mitigate the potential for an exclusion order to facilitate actual patent hold-up, while preserving the ITC's ability to issue Section 337 remedies that are consistent with the public interest. 24 A SEP holder may demonstrate an implementer's unwillingness in a number of ways. 25 First, an implementer may be unwilling if it affirmatively demonstrates that it will not negotiate with the complainant. An implementer may also be unwilling if it engages in a "constructive 20 946 F. Supp. 2d 998,1002 (N.D. Cal. 2013). 21 Realtek Semiconductor Corp.,.. LSI Corp., No. C-12-3451, 2014 U.S. Dist. Lexis 81673, at *23 (N.D. Cal. June 16, 2014); see alsolnnovatio!p Ventures, LLC Patent Litigation, MDL No. 2303,2013 WL 5593609, at *9 (N.D. 111. Oct. 3, 2013) (..[i]n light of all ofthe testimony, and particularly the evidence about Broadcom's real-world concerns about patent hold-up, the court concludes thm patent hold-up is a substantial problem that RAND is designed to prevent"'). 22 The threat of patent hold-up is reduced, or eliminated, once the FRAND tenns have been set through either party agreement or neutral adjudication. In that instance, the 1TC can detennine whether the implementer has refused to be bound by the previously-established FRAND terms. If that is the case, the issuance of an exclusion order could be in the public interest. 2 :~ While not applicable to the ltc, the injunction standard that applies in federal district court is instructive: the patent holder is the one that canies the burden of establishing that an injunction is appropriate. ebay '' lv!ercexclwnge, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388, 391 (2006). 24 Com pl.,, 15, Matter of Motorola Mobility LLC and Google Inc., File No. 12 I -0120 (F.T.C. Jan. 3, 2013) ("A SEP-holder that makes a voluntary FRAND commitment promises to license its SEPs on t:1ir and non-discriminatory tenns to any willing to accept a license, i.e. a 'willing licensee,' and thus relinquishes its tight to exclude a willing licensee from using technologies covered by its SEPs to implement a standard."). ami/able at https:/ /www.ftc. gov/sites/default/files/documents/cases/20 13/0111301 03googiemotorolacmpt.pdf. 25 The examples that are set forth are not intended to be exhaustive. 6

refusal to negotiate a FRAND license with the SEP owner or refusal to pay what has been determined to be a FRAND royalty.'' 26 For example, this may occur when an implementer refuses to license the patent holder' s FRAND-encumbered SEPs unless it also obtains a license to the patent holder's differentiating patents, or insists on terms that are clearly outside a reasonable interpretation offrand. When there is a dispute between the parties about what terms are FRAND terms, the meaning of FRAND must first be determined by a neutral adjudicator in order for the implementer's offer to be evaluated in the context of a FRAND range. 27 An implementer may be unable to take a license if it is bankrupt, or otherwise financially unable to satisfy the terms of a FRAND license. Finally, an exclusion order may be in the public interest when the respondent is outside the jmisdiction of the United States District Com1s or is otherwise judgment-proof. FRAND licensing negotiations can be complex. As the ALI recognized, it is challenging to determine, during the course of patty negotiations, whether an offer is reasonably within a FRAND range. 28 It is likewise possible that pmiies will offer supra- or sub-frand rates in the process of eventually settling on FRAND tenus. Therefore, if, during the course of the Section 337 investigation, a FRAND range is determined, I recommend that the ltc delay the effective date of Section 337 remedies and provide parties an opp01iunity to execute a FRAND license. The pmties in that instance would face respective risks that the exclusion order will ( 1) go into 26 Ambassador Froman Letter at 2; see also U.S. Dept. of Justice and U.S. Pat. & Trade. Office, Polic:v Stateme11t on Remedies for Standards Esse/Ilia/ Patents Su~je ct to Volunrary FIRAND Commitments, (Jan. 8, 20 13) at 7. 27 A FRAND range should ret1ect the market va lue of the patented technology before the standard at issue was adopted by the SSO, taking into account then-available competing alternatives. 28 See RID at 42 ("To prove a violation of FRAND, as it is defined in ETSI, there must be a voluntary agreement or a trial in a district court, and only after the court determines a rate, could we look retrospectively at the negotiations and detennine if the offers were within the FRAND range. (FRAND contracts provide for a range of acceptable results. While some offers could clearly be outside the range, there is no mechanism for finding the range prior to litigation.)). 7

effect if the respondent refuses to make a FRAND offer; or (2) be vacated if the ltc finds that the complainant refuses to accept a FRAND offer. There are also other situations where a standards implementer would be a willing licensee and therefore it would not be in the public interest for an exclusion order to issue. This would include cases where the implementer commits to be bound by terms that either the pa1ties themselves will determine are FRAND, or that will be dete1mined by neutral adjudication. 29 Evaluating an implementer' s willingness to license in this way would also address any concerns about reverse hold-up. By adopting the unwilling licensee standard articulated in this statement, the ltc can provide greater clarity as to when an exclusion order may be approp1iate. Finally, I do not agree with the ALI's reasoning that '[b]y arguing that the products do not practice the patents, the respondents are arguing that the patents are not Standard Essential Patents."' 30 If a respondent presents affi1mative defenses, including arguments about noninfringement, invalidity, or unenforceability, these defenses should not be deemed to waive the altemative position that if the ltc rejects the asse1ted affi1mative defenses, the patent is a SEP and hence the SEP holder's FRAND commitment applies. 31 29 For instance, a respondent may affinn its willingness to license by instituting a declaratory judgment action or other proceeding in which a court will set FRAND terms. 30 RID at 39 ("As the respondents have presented no evidence that the patents are standard essential, they have failed to prove they are standard essential, and that they are entitled to claim the rights available under the ETSI FRAND policy.") and at 37 ( Respondents in this case have vigorously asserted that the patents in issue are not essential, but rather are not infringed. By so claiming, they risk losing the benetit of any defense they may have under the ETSI agreement regarding FRAND rights that protect the interests of third parties."). "See generally Medlmmwu:. Inc. 1. Gcnenrech. Inc., 549 U.S. 118, 137 (2007) (holding that a licensee is not required "to break or terminate [its licensing agreement] before seeking a declnratory judgement in federal court that the underlying patent is invalid, unenforceable, or not infringed '); see also Dec' n and Order at 8, Matter of Motorola Mobility LLC and Google Inc., File No. 12 1-01 20 (F.T.C. July 24, 20 13) (for purposes of the order, "challenging the validi ty, value. infringement. or essentiality of an alleged infringing FRAND patent does not constitute a statement that the Potential Licensee will not license such FRAND patent''). 8

III. In sum, in cases where a FRAND-encumbered SEP holder seeks an exclusion order, I urge the ltc, as part of its public interest analysis, to require the SEP holder to prove that the respondent is unwilling or unable to enter into a FRAND license before issuing an exclusion order. Based on my experience evaluating the competitive issues involving FRANDencumbered SEPs, I believe that this standard would clearly and effectively address concems about patent hold-up and therefore the impact on "competitive conditions in the United States economy and... United States consumers[,r 32 as required by Sections 337(d)(l) and (f)(l). 32 19 u.s.c. 1337(d)(l), (f)(l). 9

July 10, 2015 Respectfully submitted, (~ j Edith Ramirez Chairwoman Federal Trade Commission 600 Pennsylvania A venue, NW Washington, D.C. 20580 I certify that I have obtained consent to file on behalf of Chairwoman Ramirez. Is/ Hemy Su Henry Su Attomey Advisor Federal Trade Commission 600 Pennsylvania A venue, NW Washington, D.C. 20580 (202) 326-3659 hsu@ftc.gov 10

CERTAIN 3G MOBILE HANDSETS AND COMPONENTS THEREOF Investigation No. 337-TA-613 REMAND CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I, Henry Su, certify that on July 13,2015, copies of the foregoing WRITTEN SUBMISSION ON THE PUBLIC INTEREST OF FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION CHAIR WOMAN EDITH RAMIREZ were delivered, pursuant to Commission regulations, to the following interested parties as indicated: The Honorable Lisa Barton Secretary to the Commission U.S. International Trade Commission 500 E Street, S.W., Room 112A Washington, D.C. 20436 Via EDIS and 8 Copies Via Hand Delivery The Honorable Theodore R. Essex Via Hand Delivery (Two Copies) and Administrative Law Judge Electronic Mail to U.S. International Trade Commission 500 E Street, S.W., Room 317 tamara.foley@usitc.gov and Washington, DC 20436 john.kaplan@usitc.gov Lisa Murray Office of Unfair Import investigations Via Electronic Mail to U.S. International Trade Commission 500 E Street, S.W., Room 401 lisa.mmtay@usitc.gov Washington, DC 20436 11

CERTAIN 30 MOBILE HANDSETS AND COMPONENTS THEREOF Investigation No. 337-TA-613 REMAND Maximilian A. Grant Bert C. Reiser Jonathan D. Link Latham & Watkins LLP 555 Eleventh Street, NW, Suite 1000 Washington, D.C. 20004 Ron E. Shulman Latham & Watkins LLP 140 Scott Drive Menlo Park, CA 94025 Julie M. Holloway Latham & Watkins LLP 505 Montgomery Street, Suite 2000 San Francisco, CA 94111-6538 Counsel for Complainants InterDigital Communications Corp. and lnterdigital Technology Corporation Via Electronic Mail to 613 interdigitalitc.lwteam@lw.com 12

CERTAIN 3G MOBILE HANDSETS AND COMPONENTS THEREOF Investigation No. 337-TA-613 REMAND David S. Steuer Michael B. Levin Maura L. Rees Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC 650 Page Mill Rd. Palo Alto, CA 94304-1050 Lucy Yen Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC 13 01 A venue of the Americas, 40th Fl. New York, NY 10019-6022 VeronicaS. Ascarrunz Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC 1700 K Street NW Washington DC 20006 Via Electronic Mail to WSGR-interdigital-itc2@wsgr.com Counselfor Complainants Inter Digital Communications Corp. and InterDigital Technology Corporation Brian R. Nester Sidley Austin LLP 1501 K Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005 Richard A. Cederoth Sidley Austin LLP One South Dearborn Chicago, Illinois 60603 Via Electronic Mail NokialncMMOITC _ 613-868-800@sidley.corn Counselfor Respondent Nokia Inc. and Microsoft Mobile Oy 13

CERTAIN 3G MOBILE HANDSETS AND COMPONENTS THEREOF Investigation No. 337-TA-613 REMAND Marsha E. Diedrich Alston & Bird LLP 333 South Hope Street, 16th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90071 Patrick J. Flinn John D. Haynes Alston & Bird LLP One Atlantic Center 1201 West Peachtree Street Via Electronic Mail Nokia. Interdigi tal. ITC@ alston. com Counsel.for Respondent Nokia Corporation July 13, 2015 Is/ Henry Su Henry Su Attorney Advisor Federal Trade Commission 600 Pennsylvania A venue, NW Washington, D.C. 20580 (202) 326-3659 hsu@ftc.gov 14