
Motorola initially went into the case demanding that the FRAND rate be a $4 billion annual payment by Microsoft, however now it is estimated that with Microsoft's current sales Motorola can only expect a payment of around $1.8 million per year. This amount is 50% higher than what Microsoft claimed they were willing to pay - $1.2 million a year - however this is "less than a twentieth of a percent of Motorola's initial demand". Motorola will not even be able to cover their legal fees with this award amount, and it is clear that this determination was a major loss for both Motorola and Google. Moreover, this ruling is only further compounding Google's continued losses against Microsoft (see my previous article), as Google has failed to achieve significant returns of any kind from its purchase of Motorola Mobility. Google paid $12.5 billion to acquire Motorola, with an eye towards bolstering their patent portfolio, but they have seen limited returns (only in the millions of dollars) on the leveraging of Motorola's patent portfolio. It seems Google was fooled into purchasing Motorola due to the sheer number of patents that they possessed they did not examine the relevancy and value of each individual patent. For the time being then, it seems as if Microsoft is dominating Google, and I look forward to seeing how Google fights back.
Link: http://www.fosspatents.com/2013/04/court-determined-frand-rate-for.html
I wrote about this as well, and I agree that this is a huge blow to Google given their original royalty demands and then the subsequent reality of getting millions instead of billions of dollars.
ReplyDeleteI think most people would agree that it was a little ambitious for Google to expect a Hail Mary return on its $12.5Bn buyout through suing Microsoft. What is interesting is the court's concession that the Google/Motorola patents did have some tangible value for the video codec and the WiFi standard--no doubt encouraging Google to leverage these specific patents against other tech giants.
ReplyDeleteAt least some of Google/Motorola patents have been deemed valuble.
ReplyDeletewow, this is an extensive post. Looks like a pretty painful result for Google...seems like this is happening pretty often. Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteThis was a miscalculated move on Google's part. They indeed lost out on a lot of money that they thought they would have made.
ReplyDelete