DocumentCode :
1091814
Title :
Coming down the home stretch in the Rambus standardization skullduggery saga: To levy or not to levy royalties
Author :
Stern, Richard
Volume :
27
Issue :
2
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
80
Lastpage :
82
Abstract :
The tale of Rambus\´s standardization skullduggery in developing JE- DEC\´s (Joint Electron Device Engineering Council\´s) SDRAM standard has unfolded for this journal\´s readers in many Micro Law columns since the first report in the May/June 2001 issue.1 First, Rambus and Infineon duked it out in the federal courts. Then the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) began a proceeding against Rambus in June 2002. That proceeding eventually led to a determination in July 2006 that Rambus engaged in unfair and deceptive practices. The FTC also found that "Rambus engaged in exclusionary conduct that significantly contributed to its acquisition of monopoly power in four related markets." The Commission then announced that it would determine a remedy for the unlawful conduct after additional briefings and argument. In February 2007, the FTC issued its final order on remedy. The key controversy was whether mandatory licensing of Rambus\´s patents should be on a royalty- free or reasonable-royalty basis.
Keywords :
monopoly; patents; Federal Trade Commission; Joint Electron Device Engineering Council; Micro Law; Rambus standardization; SDRAM standard; mandatory licensing; monopoly; royalty levy; Electron devices; Intellectual property; Law; Licenses; Monopoly; SDRAM; Semiconductor device manufacture; Standardization; Standards development; Technological innovation; DDR SDRAM; JEDEC; Rambus; SDRAM; Secret Squirrel; antitrust violation; law; patents; skullduggery; standardization;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Micro, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0272-1732
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MM.2007.30
Filename :
4287398
Link To Document :
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