I thought this would be page one news.
Over the last two years, Apple has been engaged in vicious legal battles over smartphone patents, many of which are aimed at squelching (or squeezing money out of) manufacturers of devices running Android. And now, for some reason, it has given valuable patents to a patent troll which is using them to sue many of the top technology companies in the world.
Meet Digitude Innovations, a firm based in Virginia that recently filed suit with the International Trade Commission alleging patent infringement by technology companies including RIM, HTC, LG, Motorola, Samsung, Sony, Amazon, and Nokia (note that Apple is not on this list). The ITC is a favorite for companies litigating over mobile phone patent disputes, as it can block the import of products long before a case has actually concluded.
Digitude was founded in 2010 and raised $50 million from Altitude Capital Partners, with aims to acquire, aggregate, and license key technology areas within the consumer electronics and related technology fields in a patent consortium in other words, it buys up patents and then sues other companies until they settle and agree to pay licensing fees, because its generally less expensive than actually going to court.
From a Forbes article this past June:
Digitude is a new kind of patent investment vehicle because it seeks to team up with strategic players that can invest in Digitude not with money, but by contributing patents. The contributing entity would then get a license for all of Digitudes patents, [Digitude Chairman Robert] Kramer says.
In April, Digitude announced the completion of its first such strategic partnership with one of the worlds leading consumer electronics companies which it didnt name. The company later announced that additional (unnamed) parties have jumped on board as well, who will receive a portion of Digitudes proceeds based on the value of the IP each party contributed.
Apple appears to be one of these participants, and may be the unnamed leading consumer electronics company that Digitude boasted about this past spring. Of the four patents that Digitude included in its claim this week, two were owned by Apple earlier this year, before they were transferred to Digitude.
The patents in question:
USPTO #6208879 Mobile Information Terminal Equipment and Portable Electronic Apparatus
USPTO #6456841 Mobile Communication Apparatus Notifying User Of Reproduction Waiting Information Effectively
In both cases, Apple transfered ownership of the patent to a company called Cliff Island LLC, which in turn transferred it to Digitude Innovations. In fact, Apple has transferred a dozen patents to Cliff Island LLC this year (though only two of these were named in this ITC suit).
You probably havent heard of Cliff Island LLC, because it appears to exist in name only. There is a next to no information about the company available online though the patent filing does include an address: 485 Madison Avenue, Suite 2300 in New York City.
I was unable to find a phone number for the company, so I attempted to pay a visit to their office, only to find that it doesnt appear to exist. But there are other tenants on the twenty-third floor of 485 Madison. One of which is Altitude Capital, the same IP-focused private equity firm that happened to lead Digitudes $50 million funding round.
Put another way, Apple appears to have transferred its patents to the patent troll Digitude, though it first routed them through a shell company that shares the same office as Digitudes lead investor and Chairman. Further evidence of the relationship between Apple and Digitude can be found on the ITCs own website, where a list of files relevant to the lawsuit can be found. Many of these files are marked confidential, but it appears someone mistakenly left the file names intact. One of which is Digitude-Apple License Agreement (see screenshot below).
So what is going on? There are a pair of scenarios that seem plausible though both of them are strange.
The first is that Apple is using Digitude as a hired gun of sorts in its patent offensive, giving the company valuable patents to wield against its opponents (while avoiding the waves of press that are spurred by each new lawsuit). But Apple hasnt exactly been quiet about suing its rivals over smartphone patents, so its not clear what theyd gain from this.
The alternative is that Apple has given some of its patents to Digitude because the patent troll came after it first. The dozen patents Apple has handed over may have been part of a settlement with the firm, along with the license agreement (which would presumably give Apple the rights to its patents, and additional Digitude patents). This seems more likely.
But even if Digitude shot first, so to speak, its still hard to see Apple in a positive light here. This is Apple were talking about. The idea that the company didnt have any options other than handing over valuable patents to a patent troll knowing full well that it would then use those patents to sue other tech companies seems ludicrous.
I spoke with Julie Samuels, Staff Attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation who focuses on patents, who points out that in some cases certain companies will sell their patents to other parties when theyre under financial stress. But Apple clearly doesnt fall into that bucket.
If Apple were deliberately aiding Digitude, Samuels says it would be horrifying the patent troll problem is completely out of control. Apple has every legal right to sue over its patents, but it should be the one to do it.
And if Apple was indeed threatened first by Digitude, and only handed over its patents as part of a settlement, she says she cannot imagine any reasonable scenario where Apple didnt have any other options.
Both Apple and Digitude declined to comment.
Also, oddly, Digitude Innovations had a website as recently as December 4, but it apparently took it down in the last few days.
http://techcrunch.com/2011/12/09/apple-made-a-deal-with-the-devil-no-worse-a-patent-troll/
Over the last two years, Apple has been engaged in vicious legal battles over smartphone patents, many of which are aimed at squelching (or squeezing money out of) manufacturers of devices running Android. And now, for some reason, it has given valuable patents to a patent troll which is using them to sue many of the top technology companies in the world.
Meet Digitude Innovations, a firm based in Virginia that recently filed suit with the International Trade Commission alleging patent infringement by technology companies including RIM, HTC, LG, Motorola, Samsung, Sony, Amazon, and Nokia (note that Apple is not on this list). The ITC is a favorite for companies litigating over mobile phone patent disputes, as it can block the import of products long before a case has actually concluded.
Digitude was founded in 2010 and raised $50 million from Altitude Capital Partners, with aims to acquire, aggregate, and license key technology areas within the consumer electronics and related technology fields in a patent consortium in other words, it buys up patents and then sues other companies until they settle and agree to pay licensing fees, because its generally less expensive than actually going to court.
From a Forbes article this past June:
Digitude is a new kind of patent investment vehicle because it seeks to team up with strategic players that can invest in Digitude not with money, but by contributing patents. The contributing entity would then get a license for all of Digitudes patents, [Digitude Chairman Robert] Kramer says.
In April, Digitude announced the completion of its first such strategic partnership with one of the worlds leading consumer electronics companies which it didnt name. The company later announced that additional (unnamed) parties have jumped on board as well, who will receive a portion of Digitudes proceeds based on the value of the IP each party contributed.
Apple appears to be one of these participants, and may be the unnamed leading consumer electronics company that Digitude boasted about this past spring. Of the four patents that Digitude included in its claim this week, two were owned by Apple earlier this year, before they were transferred to Digitude.
The patents in question:
USPTO #6208879 Mobile Information Terminal Equipment and Portable Electronic Apparatus
USPTO #6456841 Mobile Communication Apparatus Notifying User Of Reproduction Waiting Information Effectively
In both cases, Apple transfered ownership of the patent to a company called Cliff Island LLC, which in turn transferred it to Digitude Innovations. In fact, Apple has transferred a dozen patents to Cliff Island LLC this year (though only two of these were named in this ITC suit).
You probably havent heard of Cliff Island LLC, because it appears to exist in name only. There is a next to no information about the company available online though the patent filing does include an address: 485 Madison Avenue, Suite 2300 in New York City.
I was unable to find a phone number for the company, so I attempted to pay a visit to their office, only to find that it doesnt appear to exist. But there are other tenants on the twenty-third floor of 485 Madison. One of which is Altitude Capital, the same IP-focused private equity firm that happened to lead Digitudes $50 million funding round.
Put another way, Apple appears to have transferred its patents to the patent troll Digitude, though it first routed them through a shell company that shares the same office as Digitudes lead investor and Chairman. Further evidence of the relationship between Apple and Digitude can be found on the ITCs own website, where a list of files relevant to the lawsuit can be found. Many of these files are marked confidential, but it appears someone mistakenly left the file names intact. One of which is Digitude-Apple License Agreement (see screenshot below).
So what is going on? There are a pair of scenarios that seem plausible though both of them are strange.
The first is that Apple is using Digitude as a hired gun of sorts in its patent offensive, giving the company valuable patents to wield against its opponents (while avoiding the waves of press that are spurred by each new lawsuit). But Apple hasnt exactly been quiet about suing its rivals over smartphone patents, so its not clear what theyd gain from this.
The alternative is that Apple has given some of its patents to Digitude because the patent troll came after it first. The dozen patents Apple has handed over may have been part of a settlement with the firm, along with the license agreement (which would presumably give Apple the rights to its patents, and additional Digitude patents). This seems more likely.
But even if Digitude shot first, so to speak, its still hard to see Apple in a positive light here. This is Apple were talking about. The idea that the company didnt have any options other than handing over valuable patents to a patent troll knowing full well that it would then use those patents to sue other tech companies seems ludicrous.
I spoke with Julie Samuels, Staff Attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation who focuses on patents, who points out that in some cases certain companies will sell their patents to other parties when theyre under financial stress. But Apple clearly doesnt fall into that bucket.
If Apple were deliberately aiding Digitude, Samuels says it would be horrifying the patent troll problem is completely out of control. Apple has every legal right to sue over its patents, but it should be the one to do it.
And if Apple was indeed threatened first by Digitude, and only handed over its patents as part of a settlement, she says she cannot imagine any reasonable scenario where Apple didnt have any other options.
Both Apple and Digitude declined to comment.
Also, oddly, Digitude Innovations had a website as recently as December 4, but it apparently took it down in the last few days.
http://techcrunch.com/2011/12/09/apple-made-a-deal-with-the-devil-no-worse-a-patent-troll/