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Standard-setting organisations' IPR ...
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Singh, Manveen.
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Standard-setting organisations' IPR policies = intellectual property and competition issues /
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Standard-setting organisations' IPR policies/ by Manveen Singh.
Reminder of title:
intellectual property and competition issues /
Author:
Singh, Manveen.
Published:
Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore : : 2022.,
Description:
xxiii, 211 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
[NT 15003449]:
Chapter 1. Introduction to Standards and Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 2. Disclosure Practices at Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 3. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents and the Determination of FRAND -- Chapter 4. The Interplay Between Intellectual Property and Competition in Standard-Setting -- Chapter 5. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents in an Emerging Economy: An Indian Perspective.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Intellectual property (International law) -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-2623-5
ISBN:
9789811926235
Standard-setting organisations' IPR policies = intellectual property and competition issues /
Singh, Manveen.
Standard-setting organisations' IPR policies
intellectual property and competition issues /[electronic resource] :by Manveen Singh. - Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :2022. - xxiii, 211 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Chapter 1. Introduction to Standards and Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 2. Disclosure Practices at Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 3. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents and the Determination of FRAND -- Chapter 4. The Interplay Between Intellectual Property and Competition in Standard-Setting -- Chapter 5. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents in an Emerging Economy: An Indian Perspective.
This book offers a unique insight into the world of standard-setting organizations (SSOs)' IPR policies and the role they play in balancing the interests of innovators and implementers, vis-à-vis the development of standards. Since the beginning of the 21st century, there have been quite a few questions asked of the SSOs as to the legality of their IPR policies and the enforceability of disclosure and licensing obligations enshrined therein. That, coupled with disagreements over the appropriate royalty rate and royalty base, has resulted in extensive litigation between innovators and implementers, especially across the Atlantic. The Book, in keeping the USA and EU as the two primary jurisdictions, offers a comprehensive analysis of the disclosure and licensing obligations under SSO IPR policies, with strong theoretical foundations justifying their imposition. More specifically, it offers a bird's eye view of the various facets of disclosure and licensing, ranging from non-disclosure and transparency on one hand, to the determination of FRAND on the other. While much has been said about the benefits arising out of collaborative standard-setting, disputes involving SEP licensing have not been limited to the courts, and have attracted a significant amount of scrutiny by competition/antitrust agencies. The Book provides an elaborate account of the anti-competitive concerns surrounding standard-setting, and further documents the role of courts and competition agencies in ensuring good faith licensing negotiations between the SEP holders and implementers. Despite largely focusing on SEP licensing disputes in the USA and EU, the Book also offers a dedicated chapter on standard-setting in the Indian context. The readers are presented with an in-depth discussion on the contrasting approaches adopted by the courts and the Competition Commission of India (CCI), in addressing disputes involving SEPs. The said discussion is supplemented by a careful analysis of the SEP licensing guidelines to have emerged out of other implementer-oriented economies like China and Japan. By doing so, the Book offers readers the opportunity to study and compare the SEP licensing framework in developed, as well as developing economies. SSO IPR policies play an integral role in the development of standards, and with technologies such as the Internet of Things and 5G knocking on the doors, the Book makes for a valuable study on the nuances of standard-setting through the lens of SSOs, and will find takers among a wide reader base of students, researchers, academics, law practitioners, corporates, and policy makers.
ISBN: 9789811926235
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-981-19-2623-5doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
596623
Intellectual property (International law)
LC Class. No.: K1401
Dewey Class. No.: 346.048
Standard-setting organisations' IPR policies = intellectual property and competition issues /
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Chapter 1. Introduction to Standards and Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 2. Disclosure Practices at Standard-Setting Organisations -- Chapter 3. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents and the Determination of FRAND -- Chapter 4. The Interplay Between Intellectual Property and Competition in Standard-Setting -- Chapter 5. Licensing of Standard Essential Patents in an Emerging Economy: An Indian Perspective.
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This book offers a unique insight into the world of standard-setting organizations (SSOs)' IPR policies and the role they play in balancing the interests of innovators and implementers, vis-à-vis the development of standards. Since the beginning of the 21st century, there have been quite a few questions asked of the SSOs as to the legality of their IPR policies and the enforceability of disclosure and licensing obligations enshrined therein. That, coupled with disagreements over the appropriate royalty rate and royalty base, has resulted in extensive litigation between innovators and implementers, especially across the Atlantic. The Book, in keeping the USA and EU as the two primary jurisdictions, offers a comprehensive analysis of the disclosure and licensing obligations under SSO IPR policies, with strong theoretical foundations justifying their imposition. More specifically, it offers a bird's eye view of the various facets of disclosure and licensing, ranging from non-disclosure and transparency on one hand, to the determination of FRAND on the other. While much has been said about the benefits arising out of collaborative standard-setting, disputes involving SEP licensing have not been limited to the courts, and have attracted a significant amount of scrutiny by competition/antitrust agencies. The Book provides an elaborate account of the anti-competitive concerns surrounding standard-setting, and further documents the role of courts and competition agencies in ensuring good faith licensing negotiations between the SEP holders and implementers. Despite largely focusing on SEP licensing disputes in the USA and EU, the Book also offers a dedicated chapter on standard-setting in the Indian context. The readers are presented with an in-depth discussion on the contrasting approaches adopted by the courts and the Competition Commission of India (CCI), in addressing disputes involving SEPs. The said discussion is supplemented by a careful analysis of the SEP licensing guidelines to have emerged out of other implementer-oriented economies like China and Japan. By doing so, the Book offers readers the opportunity to study and compare the SEP licensing framework in developed, as well as developing economies. SSO IPR policies play an integral role in the development of standards, and with technologies such as the Internet of Things and 5G knocking on the doors, the Book makes for a valuable study on the nuances of standard-setting through the lens of SSOs, and will find takers among a wide reader base of students, researchers, academics, law practitioners, corporates, and policy makers.
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Law and Criminology (SpringerNature-41177)
based on 0 review(s)
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11.線上閱覽_V
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EB K1401
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