Los Angeles Times

Qualcomm sues iPhone makers amid patent war

Suit follows Apple’s bid to block the firms from paying royalties to fellow tech giant.

- By Mike Freeman mike.freeman@sduniontri­bune.com

Qualcomm Inc. filed a breach of contract lawsuit late Tuesday against four Taiwanese contract manufactur­ers that build iPhones and iPads for Apple Inc. — the latest salvo in an escalating war between two tech giants over patent royalties.

Qualcomm’s court action is in response to Apple’s steps last month to block its contract manufactur­ers from paying Qualcomm for use of its cellular patents in iPhones and iPads.

“Apple is definitely behind this, and certainly what the contract manufactur­ers would say is the reason they are not paying,” said Don Rosenberg, Qualcomm’s general counsel. “Our response to that is: You are big, sophistica­ted companies. You have contractua­l obligation­s. You have license agreements with us that don’t involve Apple. You are responsibl­e for paying that.”

The San Diego company’s lawsuit names iPhone/ iPad assemblers Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. Ltd., known as Foxconn; Pegatron Corp.; Wistron Corp.; and Compal Electronic­s — all of which are based in Taiwan and have manufactur­ing operations in China and elsewhere.

All have long-standing patent license agreements with Qualcomm and continue to pay patent royalties to Qualcomm on smartphone­s and tablets that they make for other companies besides Apple, said Rosenberg.

The lawsuit seeks unpaid royalties of at least $1 billion and damages, as well as attorney fees and other costs.

Over the last eight months, Qualcomm’s patent licensing business has been under fierce attack by anti-monopoly regulators and tech giants including Apple, Samsung and Intel.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission fined Qualcomm more than $850 million and seeks to dismantle the way it licenses its patents. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission sued Qualcomm in January on similar grounds, and Samsung and Intel have filed friend of the court briefs supporting the FTC’s case.

It is a complicate­d dispute. Apple — based in Cupertino, Calif. — reimburses the contract manufactur­ers for patent royalties owed to Qualcomm.

Early this year, it withheld $1 billion in reimbursem­ents on the grounds that Qualcomm had reneged on a separate royalty “rebate” agreement with Apple in retaliatio­n for Apple’s cooperatio­n with regulators.

Then, last month, Apple quit reimbursin­g Foxconn and the others altogether for Qualcomm patent royalties — saying it couldn’t pay until the dispute was resolved.

As a result, Qualcomm slashed its financial forecast for the year.

Qualcomm pioneered a good portion of 3G/4G cellular radio technology and holds thousands of patents on its inventions. Its technology is inside nearly every smartphone. The company licenses patents based on the price of the entire device, and it has agreed to provide certain patents under “fair, reasonable and non-discrimina­tory” terms because they are included in wireless industry standards.

Qualcomm’s royalties top out at 5% of the device price, but they typically come in lower depending on each licensing deal negotiated with handset makers.

Apple and regulators allege Qualcomm abuses its market power to overcharge for “standard-essential patents” and block competitio­n. They are pushing for patent royalties based on the cost of the cellular modem chip instead of the entire phone, and they want Qualcomm to agree to license not only smartphone makers but also rival chip outfits such as Intel and Samsung.

Asked about Qualcomm’s latest lawsuits, Apple referred to Chief Executive Tim Cook’s comments this month during the company’s earnings call.

“The reason that we’re pursuing this is that Qualcomm’s trying to charge Apple a percentage of the total iPhone value,” Cook said in the call. “And they do some really great work around standards-essential patents, but it’s one small part of what an iPhone is. It’s not — it has nothing do with the display or the Touch ID or a gazillion other innovation­s that Apple has done.”

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in Associated Press ?? QUALCOMM’S PATENT licensing business has been under fierce attack by anti-monopoly regulators and technology giants such as Apple. Above, a Qualcomm booth at an Internet conference in Beijing last month.
Mark Schiefelbe­in Associated Press QUALCOMM’S PATENT licensing business has been under fierce attack by anti-monopoly regulators and technology giants such as Apple. Above, a Qualcomm booth at an Internet conference in Beijing last month.

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