Look Before You 'Lock': Standards, Tipping, and the Future of Patent Misuse After Princo

45 Pages Posted: 19 Sep 2011 Last revised: 25 May 2014

Date Written: September 15, 2012

Abstract

In network industries, consumers do not always prefer a single standard. Setting aside antitrust principles, the Federal Circuit implicitly assumed in its Princo decision that consumers preferred a single standard in the CD-R industry when it held that a patent suppression agreement did not constitute patent misuse. But some network industries can - and do - converge toward multiple standards, and antitrust analyses can be informative in this context. As this paper shows, patent suppression agreements may still “leverage” existing patents in ways that unlawfully expand their scope. This Article argues that courts must consider consumers’ demand-side preferences when they analyze patent misuse claims in network industries, and it proposes a quid-pro-quo rule that incentivizes demand-side analyses by the private sector. This rule would render suppression agreements per se legal in exchange for a commitment to release suppressed technologies into the public domain after a short time-frame, but would also support thorough patent misuse scrutiny in cases where firms refuse to make such a commitment. This rule could move us toward better empirical understandings of consumers’ preferences in network industries, preserve judicial economy in the patent misuse area, and better ensure that superior standards prevail in the marketplace.

Keywords: Patent Misuse, Antitrust, Intellectual Property, Network Industries

Suggested Citation

Suarez, Christopher Alan, Look Before You 'Lock': Standards, Tipping, and the Future of Patent Misuse After Princo (September 15, 2012). Columbia Science and Technology Law Review, Volume 13, Number 2, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1929037

Christopher Alan Suarez (Contact Author)

Yale University - Law School ( email )

P.O. Box 208215
New Haven, CT 06520-8215
United States

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