Intellectual Ventures (IV) has insisted for a long while that
its accumulation of patents has nothing to do with patent
litigation. In fact, the company has prided itself on not
filing any lawsuits, despite the claim that its patent
portfolio, comprising 27,000 patents, has brought in over $1B
in licensing revenue. Recently, IV was rumored to have struck a
$120M patent deal with Intuit Inc., and also struck deals with
companies like Cisco and Verizon for between $200M and $400M
apiece.
Interestingly, no one knows the circumstances surrounding IV's
licensing deals - to date, most every license is shrouded in
mystery (Intuit's SEC filing stated that the company "entered
into an agreement to license certain technology" for past and
future licensing rights. The filing did not disclose the
technology, the IP or the licensor.) Worse still, IV operates
using a multitude of shell companies, making it difficult to
track ownership of the patents.
Recently, IV was rumored to be engaging in "catch and release"
licensing with some of its patents - after getting a particular
patent or portfolio, IV gives prospective licensees a timetable
to pay a set amount. After the time period expires, the patent
is then sold off to anyone (read: patent plaintiff firm) that
feels they can monetize the patent(s), with a "back end"
payment being negotiated in favor of IV. In other words, IV has
allegedly started to "outsource" their patent litigation.
Zusha Elinson from the Recorder has an excellent piece on IV's
alleged foray into patent litigation, where the article covers
the saga behind Picture Frame Innovations LLC who recently
filed suit against Kodak and CDW, seeking millions of dollars
in damages. Elinson tracks the history of the patent, the
inventors, owners, and even looks at the attorneys handling
some of the behind-the-scenes matters to show IV's involvement,
and concludes that the litigation represents "a new phase" in
IV's business model.
- Read "Intellectual Ventures Takes Indirect Route to
Court"
NOTE1: An interesting factoid about the litigation is that the
lead attorney for the plaintiff is none other than Ray
Niro.
NOTE2: The complaint states that Picture Frame Innovations LLC
is located at "125 South Wacker Drive, Suite 300 Chicago, IL
60606" - this location appears to be nothing more than a
virtual office space.
NOTE3: In case anyone is looking for more information on IV and
its collection of shell companies (over 362 of them in all),
you can order a report from Avancept LLC that will give you all
the grueling details over the span of 650+ pages. To order a
report (or read the report summary)
Now It Begins? Litigation Rumors Surface Over Intellectual Ventures
| Wednesday 30th September 2009 06:46am 1 | ||
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Peter Zura 56 Posts |
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