Google legal honcho: Apple, Oracle, Microsoft use ‘bogus patents’ to wage hostile campaign against sainted Android

David Drummond, Google Senior Vice President and Chief Legal Officer, today posted the following blog post, verbatim:

I have worked in the tech sector for over two decades. Microsoft and Apple have always been at each other’s throats, so when they get into bed together you have to start wondering what’s going on. Here is what’s happening:

Android is on fire. More than 550,000 Android devices are activated every day, through a network of 39 manufacturers and 231 carriers. Android and other platforms are competing hard against each other, and that’s yielding cool new devices and amazing mobile apps for consumers.

But Android’s success has yielded something else: a hostile, organized campaign against Android by Microsoft, Oracle, Apple and other companies, waged through bogus patents.

They’re doing this by banding together to acquire Novell’s old patents (the “CPTN” group including Microsoft and Apple) and Nortel’s old patents (the “Rockstar” group including Microsoft and Apple), to make sure Google didn’t get them; seeking $15 licensing fees for every Android device; attempting to make it more expensive for phone manufacturers to license Android (which we provide free of charge) than Windows Mobile; and even suing Barnes & Noble, HTC, Motorola, and Samsung. Patents were meant to encourage innovation, but lately they are being used as a weapon to stop it.

A smartphone might involve as many as 250,000 (largely questionable) patent claims, and our competitors want to impose a “tax” for these dubious patents that makes Android devices more expensive for consumers. They want to make it harder for manufacturers to sell Android devices. Instead of competing by building new features or devices, they are fighting through litigation.

This anti-competitive strategy is also escalating the cost of patents way beyond what they’re really worth. Microsoft and Apple’s winning $4.5 billion for Nortel’s patent portfolio was nearly five times larger than the pre-auction estimate of $1 billion. Fortunately, the law frowns on the accumulation of dubious patents for anti-competitive means — which means these deals are likely to draw regulatory scrutiny, and this patent bubble will pop.

We’re not naive; technology is a tough and ever-changing industry and we work very hard to stay focused on our own business and make better products. But in this instance we thought it was important to speak out and make it clear that we’re determined to preserve Android as a competitive choice for consumers, by stopping those who are trying to strangle it.

We’re looking intensely at a number of ways to do that. We’re encouraged that the Department of Justice forced the group I mentioned earlier to license the former Novell patents on fair terms, and that it’s looking into whether Microsoft and Apple acquired the Nortel patents for anti-competitive means. We’re also looking at other ways to reduce the anti-competitive threats against Android by strengthening our own patent portfolio. Unless we act, consumers could face rising costs for Android devices — and fewer choices for their next phone.

Source: A whiny wuss who pecks out horseshit on the Official Google Blog.

MacDailyNews Take: If this is Google’s Chief Legal Officer, they’re doomed.

Beyond that, the fear is palpable. Don’t steal IP and you’ll have nothing to fear, Davey. Plus, you wouldn’t have to try (and fail) to buy other company’s patents in order to defend your theft, π-boys.

Apple invented the iPhone, not Google.

Unlock the tower and shout that up to the mole that your do-know-evil company recently kicked upstairs.

And, oh by the way: Google turned down chance to join Microsoft in the Novell patent bid. Explain that, Davey.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Fred Mertz” for the heads up.]

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Changewave: Apple iPhone demand outgrows Android phones in 2011 – July 18, 2011
Analyst: Apple takes 50% of handset industry profits ahead of 100 million iPhone year – July 8, 2011
Nielsen: Apple iPhone drives U.S. smartphone growth as Android stagnates – June 30, 2011

Google’s Schmidt: Apple not responding with innovation, they’re responding with lawsuits – July 19, 2011
Taiwan’s HTC shares tumble after U.S. ITC’s Apple patent ruling – July 18, 2011
HTC to appeal U.S. ITC ruling that company infringed on Apple patents – July 18, 2011
Apple’s U.S. ITC patent victory threatens future of Google’s Android – July 16, 2011
How Google’s Android infringes on Apple’s patents in U.S. ITC determination – July 16, 2011
U.S. ITC finds HTC infringed upon Apple patents – July 15, 2011
HTC decries ‘Apple’s constant attempts at litigations instead of competing fairly in the market’ – July 12, 2011
HTC stock tumbles after Apple’s new patent lawsuit – July 12, 2011
Apple’s second ITC complaint against HTC Android products dissected – July 11, 2011
Apple files second U.S. ITC trade complaint against HTC, seeks to block HTC imports – July 11, 2011
Steve Jobs loads up on high-powered legal team to protect Apple’s intellectual property – April 22, 2010
Apple’s patent infringement lawsuit: The elephant in HTC’s new headquarters – April 2, 2010
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The specific Apple patents over which Apple is suing HTC – March 02, 2010
Boom! Apple sues HTC for infringing on 20 iPhone patents – March 02, 2010

71 Comments

    1. Sure he knows what’s going on. He’s waging a PR campaign to possibly sway public opinion. He doesn’t care what the Apple community thinks.

      Framing the dialogue or issues shapes and directs public opinion. That’s how Fox News does it. The truth doesn’t matter. Rather, more important to convince the public about what they ought to be thinking/believing.

      1. He comes off sounding like the Information MInister. This is an odd statement for counsel to make in public before the courts have had a chance to examine pending legal claims. Smacks of desperation and may be used against Google.

      2. Sure he knows what’s going on. He’s waging a PR campaign to possibly sway public opinion. He doesn’t care what the Apple community thinks.

        Framing the dialogue or issues shapes and directs public opinion. That’s how NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and the rest of the U.S. “mainstream” media does it. The truth doesn’t matter. Rather, more important to convince the public about what they ought to be thinking/believing.

  1. My hate for Google just hit a all time high, these low life scum will stop at nothing to make themselves look as if the whole world is hurting them and they are the victim.

    They lobby with billions of dollars and then use that connection to rally hope in getting a DOJ Approved NORTEL deal overturned because they hadn’t the intelligence to bid with the dignity and relevance of a real Company.

    I have heard of sore losers and have seen them in my time, but these idiots take the cake, and by writing this shows how they talk out of each side of there prospective mouths by attacking the same system they used just last week to purchase 1000.00 IBM Patents.

    On top of it all, they are scared, a few days ago Judge Allsup allowed the email to be used as evidence that Google was aware that they needed to license those patents from Sun/Oracle.

    They are trying to get favor in the tech community in order to turn this around as a personal attack to save Android from it’s all to soon death of cost and stollen IP.

  2. The guy is actually indistinguishable from a revisionist historian working for the Chinese people’s republic. Perhaps he’s also considering airbrushing out steve jobs from his keynote speeches.

  3. Patents are not meant to “encourage” innovation; patents are specifically to PROTECT innovation once it has occurred.

    Cry me a river, Google Boy. You lost, deal with it and pay for the tech you’ve stolen.

    1. Meaning is hard to discern after the fact. But one of the key provisions of patents is that they reveal the nature of the innovation, allowing competitors to start from there and come up with new stuff on their own. Hopefully making them more competitive.

      1. The thing you forgot is that in return for providing the details of how the invention works, the creator is given a “monopoly period” on the invention to allow them to capitalize on it.

        It spurs innovation on two fronts: people/companies are encouraged to invent because they know they can be protected while they get a return on their investment, and after X years (which, as an aside, is way too many at this point, in my opinion) everyone is allowed to have at it creating further innovation as new ideas are added onto the existing ones.

  4. Dear Mr. Newbie Drummond,

    Those of us who have worked in the tech sector for over three and a half decades have something of a different opinion.

    When a person or a company comes up with a good idea, and goes to the trouble of doing the work to patent it — not a junk patent, mind you, but a well-documented, very detailed patent — then they have a right under the law to the exclusive use of that intellectual property until that patent expires.

    Those who use that intellectual property without realizing that there’s a patent are called “careless.”

    Those who use that intellectual property knowing that a patent exists, and ignoring that patent, are called “thieves.”

    Google falls into the latter group.

    Personally, I hope that Apple declines to license its patents to Google, and forces Google to pay the full extent of damages under the law (which, as a non-lawyer, I understand to be 100% of the retail purchase price of infringing items).

    Have a nice day.

    1. As a technologist with nearly as many years, the intellectual (and legal) failure of Mr. Newbie Drummond is within his claim of “Patents were meant to encourage innovation, but lately they are being used as a weapon to stop it.”

      The correct statement is:

      Patents are meant to encourage innovation by providing the reward of legally being able to stop others from using it without your permission.

      The ethical failure of Google is to have failed to perform due diligence to assure that they were using only their own IP property and Public Domain works.

      -hh

    2. I have only two decades of effort in the tech sector, but I agree with you completely.

      I do not understand the “kids today” who think that somehow it is wrong for Apple to defend their efforts with patents.

      I suspect they have never created something genuinely innovative.

  5. If Google have evidence of prior art that they developed their innovative technology before others, then now is the time to show it. But if Google are doing a ‘Samsung’ and just copying whomever is successful then they are no better than a ‘Chinese Apple Stoer’ [Sic].

  6. They pay this douchebag to come out with this pathetic excuse for a defence? I could give a better argument in my pyjamas, while on the toilet, an I’d do it for half the price!!

    If you’re interested google give me a shout back on this thread..*

    * I’m not a legal expert and I don’t guarantee that I won’t piss all over your company and plead guilty to every patent infringement you committed!

  7. Everyone steps on the foot prints of giants! Apple just got lucky that everyone the arrows on for osx and iOS use the GPL and are all about free software and exchange of ideas.

        1. the Internet offers cowards like this “joe biden” to be anonymous, unless, of course, he gets revealed like another sad bigot who was publicized by pictures after being given the right to suggest violence towards the president. regardless of political leaning, it’s sad.

        2. “Obama’s failure is the failure of the liberal elite, and that is why their ressentiment has reached such intensity. Their ideas, such as they are, are being put to a real-world test and found severely wanting. As a result, their authority is collapsing. And if there is one thing they know deep in their bones, it is that they are entitled to that authority. They lash out, desperately and pathetically, because they have nothing to offer but fear and anger.” – James Taranto

        3. The internet also gives liars like you the opportunity to reveal your lack of integrity and critical thinking skills by falling back to calling people “racist” and claiming they want to do violence.. .when in reality, every micromanaging little program you want to do is backed by government violence.

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