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U.S. Bans Some Cellphones For Patent Reasons

runner_one writes "According to the New York Times, A federal agency has banned imports of new cellphones made with Qualcomm semiconductors because the chips violate a patent held by Broadcom. The International Trade Commission said today that the import ban would not apply to mobile phone models that were imported on or before June 7." Update: 06/08 13:05 GMT by KD : Glenn Fleishman notes that Apple's iPhone will be allowed into the country, since it doesn't use any 3G chips. He adds that Apple "might have the most advanced smartphone on the market unless President Bush or his trade representative overturn the ruling (which they have the power to do)."

1 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. One sided summary by Magnus+Pym · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Qualcomm has been aggressive in promoting their patent rights. But to say
    that they are unique in this field is completely ignoring one side of the story.

    Every try to make something in the GSM/UMTS space? You will have about a dozen companies
    approach you with their hands out. Nokia, Qualcomm, Ericcson, Motorola, Lucent, Samsung
    and several others. CDMA royalties are about 5%, almost all paid to Qualcomm. GSM/UMTS
    royalties sum up to about 18%. The only difference is that if you are one of the big guys,
    you "cross-license" your patents so that you don't end up actually paying anything. If you
    are a new entrant... well, you are out of luck.

    What is pissing off the Nokias, Ericcsons and Broadcomms of the world is that in the CDMA space,
    they have no patents at all. None. That is because they fought CDMA every step of the way until Qualcomm
    demonstrated conclusively that it is a commercially practical technology. Then they
    turned around and tried to claim it as their own, and tried to co-opt it by applying it with minor
    modifications to the UMTS space.

    Actually, I am amazed that Broadcomm is getting away with this. Their sum total of contributions to
    the wireless space is close to zero. They have done some work in the wireline world in the early
    years, but they have contributed zip, zilch, nada in the development of wireless IP. They are not
    even a name in the industry. HOwever, it is possible that they have purchased some IPR of late.

    I am quite happy to see cracks in the patent edifice as a whole, but making Qualcomm the villain in
    this is not correct. Qualcomm laid many of the foundations for modern wireless communications technology;
    Qualcomm corporate R&D is about as close as you can get to how Bell Labs used to be.
    Lots of Qualcomm's IPR consists of non-trivial, non-obvious, fundamental contributions to communications
    theory. Most other wireless companies, in particular Nokia, Motorola, Ericcson etc have done nothing
    fundamental in the past 15 years. They are product companies whose forte consists of taking old technologies
    and packaging them in crowd-pleasing form factors, or (in the case of Ericcson), maintaining relationships
    with behemoth carriers.

    Magnus