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Google Loses Bid to Overturn Low-Cost Patent Licenses to Microsoft

The widely watched case involves royalty rates for Motorola Mobility patents held by Google.

Shutterstock / l i g h t p o e t

In a setback for Google, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday that the low licensing rate Microsoft pays to use some of Google’s Motorola Mobility patents had been properly set.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said a lower court judge properly determined the patents’ value even though the royalty rate was only a fraction of what Motorola had asked for. Google sold the Motorola handset business to Lenovo last year but kept its patents.

The court also upheld $14.5 million awarded to Microsoft for Motorola’s breach of contract to license its patents fairly.

Both Microsoft and Google declined to comment on the decision.

The case has been broadly followed by the technology industry because it could affect how Google and others negotiate royalty rates on their technology.

Microsoft sued Motorola in 2010, alleging Motorola had breached its obligation to offer licenses to wireless and video patents used in Xbox game consoles and Windows products at a reasonable cost.

After a 2012 trial, U.S. District Judge James Robart in Seattle said the appropriate royalty rate was $1.8 million, far less than Motorola’s demand for as much as $4 billion a year. A jury later found Motorola in breach of contract. Google appealed the verdict and the royalty rate to the 9th Circuit.

The dispute highlighted a debate over how much patent owners should be able to ask others to pay to use inventions that have become widely adopted in certain technologies.

Apple, Intel and other companies filed court papers in support of Microsoft’s position, while major patent licenser Qualcomm opposed Robart’s calculation, saying it will devalue patents and cause “incalculable damage” to innovation.

The case in the 9th Circuit is Microsoft Corp vs. Motorola Mobility Inc et al, 14-35393.

(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Tom Brown)

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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