Are Any Of The Patents Google Got With Motorola Mobility Any Good?

from the does-it-even-matter? dept

With all of the attention Google bought for buying Motorola Mobility for its patents, one question that not too many people asked was whether or not those patents were any good. Of course, when you’re dealing with 17,000 patents and the fact that Google has shown no signs of planning to go on the offensive with patent fights, it seems clear that the point of getting this patent portfolio was very much about quantity over quality — mainly to ward off lawsuits from other big companies, with the recognition that somewhere in those 17,000 patents was probably something that the other company infringed upon.

Still, the folks at M-CAM decided to put the Motorola Mobility patent portfolio to the test by using a variety of scoring techniques, and believes that the portfolio isn’t all that valuable, both in the aggregate and at the specific level. It basically found that about 48% of the patents are probably worthless. At the specific level, the company looked at the 18 patents that Motorola Mobility had asserted against Apple, suggesting that these particular patents may be the “stars” of the bunch — but, again, found that nine of those patents were “impaired,” and were unlikely to be very strong or valuable.

The report notes that buying and maintaining dubious patents probably isn’t a particularly good value by itself:

Google is paying $12.5 billion for alleged assets that include a 17,000 patent portfolio, of which close to half appear to serve as deterrent value alone. The cost of maintaining patents of dubious quality will be an ongoing and potentially unnecessary liability to Google and its shareholders. Regrettably, close to half of the portfolio deemed “best” based on previous assertions have substantial weaknesses. Google?s patent stockpiling initiative appears to be focused entirely on deterrent value rather than on acquiring quality assets. Google shareholders may take some small solace in the adoption of a multi pronged defensive strategy, but may want to demand higher quality standards for the assets and liabilities acquired in future transactions.

Of course, if Google’s goal is longer term, it’s possible that this isn’t such a crazy deal. Already, we’ve seen that this acquisition alone has been a key driving force in getting lots of people (and especially the press) to admit that the patent system is clearly broken. Spending that much to get that kind of widespread awareness may be worth it… if it leads to real reform (which is still a big question mark). On top of that, if the quantity of patents has a deterrent value, no matter the quality of the overall bunch, it’s likely that Google will still find it “worth it.” However, the fact that it now needs to maintain these 17,000 patents, where approximately half may have no direct commercial value, really demonstrates (yet again) the massive “tax” of bad patents on companies.

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Companies: google, motorola mobility

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Comments on “Are Any Of The Patents Google Got With Motorola Mobility Any Good?”

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39 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Raised Hand...

Maintain Your Patent
http://www.uspto.gov/patents/process/maintain.jsp
Expired Patents for Failure to Pay Maintenance Fees
http://www.uspto.gov/patents/process/expform.jsp

http://www.the-business-of-patents.com/patent-maintenance-fees.html

Only the big boys can afford huge patent portfolios maybe that is why almost all garbage patents only have a life span of 12 years because nobody wants to pay the 5 thousand dollar fee that comes with it.
http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2010/06/patent-maintenance-fee-data.html

Now why copyright doesn’t work like that every 3 years you should have to renew your copyright.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Raised Hand...

Short answer: No!

For that I would have to look at each and every patent to see what they are about.

Only after that, hopefully one would have a picture of what is or not worth it or could be worth it in the future.

Also without understanding for what is good or having no way to know what could be in the future it may trigger the hoarding mentality, just keep hoping it could be useful in the future.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Raised Hand...

For almost 200 years once a patent issued it remained in full force until its entire term had passed.

In the 1980’s someone happened to notice that in Europe patentees were periodically required to pay what are known as “maintenance fees”. Every few years a patentee had to pony up money to keep his/her patent in force. Failure to do so meant that the patent would lapse.

Not to be outdone in its quest for tax dollars, Congress took note and decided “Hey, let’s get on that gravy train as well”. The motivation? For decades Congress has been taking away from the USPTO money collected by the USPTO, thus having more money to play with. In fact, this has been a sore point given that the USPTO is supposed to be self-supporting, and it is a bit difficult to keep up with an increasing workload when Congress dips into the money pot and takes away the USPTO’s ability to hire needed staff, resources to better research and discover relevant prior art, etc.

Thus, in the 1980’s the “maintenance fee” concept was added to US law, the law requiring three payments (on an escalating fee basis, of course) over the life of a patent if a patentee wanted to enjoy the full term of the patent.

Tony Vitale says:

Re: Raised Hand...

One expense is constant monitoring other companies that may be infringing on those patents. The courts view a companies lack of enforcement of it’s patents as a negative and proof that a particular suit is not justified. This forces companies to employ a boat load of attorneys to monitor a wide amount of companies in a wide amount of fields looking for and warning against possible violations.

M-CAM Inc. (user link) says:

Re: Re:

We are most definitely not anti-patent. We are pro patents as long as they novel, non-obvious, and reduced to practice. We want to bring more value to the intangible asset class and the only way that can be done is by only granted patents which are truly innovations and not people trying to copy innovation to then get the exclusive rights.

Lawrence D'Oliveiro says:

Wrong Measure

The question is, can a crack platoon of lawyers use these patents to scare the shit out of other companies? Remember, it doesn?t matter whether the case will stand up in court or not, the sheer cost and hassle of getting that far will deter all but the most iron-stomached opponents.

Most of Microsoft?s patents are probably equally worthless. Most of Apple?s patents are almost certainly equally worthless. Doesn?t matter if the gun can only fire blanks; the fact that it looks like a big gun is threat enough.

Spade says:

Re: Wrong Measure

Considering that Microsoft and Apple were already suing Motorola Mobility prior to the acquisition, it doesn’t seem very likely that Google got much patent protection in this deal. And with CEO Sanjay Jha making very public statements about how they were going to use their patents to go after other Android handset makers, it seems more likely that Google was forced into this deal:

I don?t think it?s curious at all why Google didn?t simply license Motorola?s patents. Motorola held out for a full acquisition at a premium far above the company?s actual value, and threatened to go after its sibling Android partners if Google didn?t acquiesce. Thus the public threats from Jha and Icahn. Thus the high price. Thus the lack of a simpler, cheaper licensing agreement. Thus the unusual $2.5 billion reverse breakup fee.

In fact, I’d go so far as to argue that Google had no intention of doing any kind of deal with Motorola at all, until they forced Google’s hand with their threats. Others see the deal as Google wanting to exert stronger control over Android, and wanting to prevent Motorola Mobility from settling with Microsoft or Apple on terms unfavorable to Android’s long-term future. Though it still may not prevent Google from embarrassment if those cases don’t go in their favor:

If regulatory scrutiny delays the closing of the acquisition, Google could end up buying a company that is formally enjoined from importing Android-based devices into the United States. That would be a really awkward situation. In that kind of scenario, Google might come under pressure from its own shareholders to consider paying the huge $2.5 billion break-up fee. Such an outcome could also raise serious questions about the strength of MMI’s portfolio.

…which fits with the overall lack of patent strength noted by M-CAM, further reinforcing my conviction that it’s a mistake to focus on the patent angle of the Google-Motorola Mobility deal.

Derek Kerton (profile) says:

Re: Re: Wrong Measure

Have you factored in the reality that there is NO other valid reason?

– Build your own custom phones:
Nope, Google can already do this. Remember the 3 Nexus models?Also, a pretty telling example is Apple, that does not make the iPhone. It is outsourced to Foxconn. That Apple doesn’t build the iPhone makes it pretty hard to argue that Google needs to buy an OEM to make a special, customized phone.

– Channel conflict:
The one thing that Google certainly gets with MMI is actually a negative. They scare off their OEM partners who don’t like the fact that Motorola is likely to get preferred status.

So, go ahead and argue that it was a BAD patent purchase if you want, but there is no other reason for the MMI acquisition that holds up to even light scrutiny.

Lawrence D'Oliveiro says:

Re: Re: Wrong Measure

Spade:

Considering that Microsoft and Apple were already suing Motorola Mobility prior to the acquisition, it doesn’t seem very likely that Google got much patent protection in this deal.

As I said, it doesn?t matter how much ?protection? the patents really offer, the point is what you do with them. If Google were to use them more aggressively than Motorola, that would make all the difference.

Howard the Duck (profile) says:

Re: Just more money to waste...

“This acquisition will not change our commitment to run Android as an open platform. Motorola will remain a licensee of Android and Android will remain open. We will run Motorola as a separate business. Many hardware partners have contributed to Android?s success and we look forward to continuing to work with all of them to deliver outstanding user experiences.”

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/08/supercharging-android-google-to-acquire.html

Google didn’t buy the patents to only protect themselves. They are protecting the entire Android ecosystem.

btrussell (profile) says:

“Are Any Of The Patents Google Got With Motorola Mobility Any Good?”

Does it matter?

This reminds me of the guy who always says “you should have told me, I could have got you one for half that.”

After being told that, people ask me if I think it is true and did they waste their money? To which I reply, “were you happy with the agreement when it was made? Then (you got a good deal!)(why did you agree?)

Derek Kerton (profile) says:

MAD and Inflatable Fake Tanks

It’s about quantity. Remember, this is a Mutually Assured Destruction scenario, not an actual patent lawsuit. The way to win in a “cold war” is not to have the most/best weapons, but SIMPLY TO CONVINCE THE ENEMY THAT YOU DO.

Thus, we have military ‘game theory’ strategies like inflatable tanks, which look like real tanks from satellite or airborne surveillance. The message, don’t attack us on this flank, because we’ve got tanks up the wazoo.

For nukes, you don’t actually need all the nukes. You just need a few highly visible nuclear tests, then you build missile compounds with visible terrestrial surface features. You don’t really even need to dig the subterranean components. The ‘bad guys’ will think you’ve got ICBMs with nuke warheads down there, and will not launch their fake missiles because if they did, you would fake bomb the shit outta them.

In some 17,000 patents, nobody is expected to take the time to find out if there is a “real bomb”. All it takes is one, and everyone just assumes that among 17k, there probably is one that is ticking.

another mike (profile) says:

Re: it's a smokescreen

came in here to say this.

So now Google’s got a whole package set: a dedicated manufacturing and marketing channel, a decent sized if not decent quality patent portfolio, and the tax breaks of a company operating at a loss to balance out their huge profits. I think Google knows what their doing and they’re going to come out way ahead.

PeterCao (profile) says:

Schmidt in debt

In [ http://read.bi/ericoutofcontrol ]Eric Schmidt on Sep 2, 4:02 AM said:

@Peter Cao: Peter. It’s me, Eric. I thought we already talked about this. I am going to squash you like a bug if you keep posting on this comment board. What you don’t know (but surely suspected) is that the video cameras I installed in your house are allowing me to track everything you do. In fact, I am live streaming your pathetic life, including all the insane searches you do about my home address and love interests, to all my friends on the Stanford faculty. Next I will bring in my mafia-like dark killing power to bear.

===========================================================
Eric, be you real or not Schmidt, so finally, your psychological defense was broken, now that your mind became insane.

Didn’t I defeat you globally wherever you go? You still don’t understand, that’s because your deeds, killing the innocent and threatening the victim, would not be tolerated anywhere on this planet. Anyone would be alerted of this case when you assisted a Stanford Computer Science faculty Sebastian Thrun to counter Stanford ruling against him and to threatening me from fighting against your crimes, by threatening me with the real murder case of
Stanford student May Zhou; in fact, police investigation had confirmed it is people on you (Schmidt) and Thrun’s side who murdered May Zhou, before I would post the case on the web. Quite a scandal unheard of in history of college education.

I clearly aware your side is closely watching me though I am a powerless victim on the other side of the earth, because you fear me of my speech to the public about your crimes, crimes you dare not deny, but would drive you insane as you are now. I never search your address or personal issues, other than posting your deeds on the web, this time you are really irritated and finally displayed the evil you to the public.

Have some manners please. That’s not going to save you of your fate as a loser … You still have to explain to the public of your crimes behind May Zhou’s case and plotted murder on me, which got you removed from your CEO position, and so You still have to face the legal conseqences. [ http://bit.ly/mayzhoucase ]

PeterCao (profile) says:

Schmidt lost grounds

In [ http://read.bi/ericoutofcontrol ]Eric Schmidt on Sep 2, 4:02 AM said:

@Peter Cao: Peter. It’s me, Eric. I thought we already talked about this. I am going to squash you like a bug if you keep posting on this comment board. What you don’t know (but surely suspected) is that the video cameras I installed in your house are allowing me to track everything you do. In fact, I am live streaming your pathetic life, including all the insane searches you do about my home address and love interests, to all my friends on the Stanford faculty. Next I will bring in my mafia-like dark killing power to bear.

===========================================================
Eric, be you real or not Schmidt, so finally, your psychological defense was broken, now that your mind became insane.

Didn’t I defeat you globally wherever you go? You still don’t understand, that’s because your deeds, killing the innocent and threatening the victim, would not be tolerated anywhere on this planet. Anyone would be alerted of this case when you assisted a Stanford Computer Science faculty Sebastian Thrun to counter Stanford ruling against him and to threatening me from fighting against your crimes, by threatening me with the real murder case of
Stanford student May Zhou; in fact, police investigation had confirmed it is people on you (Schmidt) and Thrun’s side who murdered May Zhou, before I would post the case on the web. Quite a scandal unheard of in history of college education.

I clearly aware your side is closely watching me though I am a powerless victim on the other side of the earth, because you fear me of my speech to the public about your crimes, crimes you dare not deny, but would drive you insane as you are now. I never search your address or personal issues, other than posting your deeds on the web, this time you are really irritated and finally displayed the evil you to the public.

Have some manners please. That’s not going to save you of your fate as a loser … You still have to explain to the public of your crimes behind May Zhou’s case and plotted murder on me, which got you removed from your CEO position, and so You still have to face the legal conseqences. [ http://bit.ly/mayzhoucase ]

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