A NAASTy Alternative to RAND Pricing Commitments
Voluntary standard setting organizations (SSOs) typically require participants to disclose their patents during the standard-setting process, and will endorse a standard only if patent holders commit to license them on “reasonable and non-discriminatory” or RAND terms. We argue that this policy is unworkable—the RAND standard is ambiguous and thus extremely hard to adjudicate. As an alternative, we propose a policy of Non-Assertion After Specified Time, or NAAST pricing. Under NAAST, technology vendors commit not to assert their patent after some previous specified time, but would be free to collect royalties as they wish up until that point. Under our proposal, technology producers would be compensated, vendors would have quick and eventually free access to standards and a large element of uncertainty due to litigation would be eliminated.
Year of publication: |
2010-01
|
---|---|
Authors: | Rysman, Marc ; Simcoe, Timothy |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, Boston University |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Dynamics of Consumer Demand for New Durable Goods
Gowrisankaran, Gautam, (2007)
-
Identifying the Age Profile of Patent Citations
Mehta, Aditi, (2007)
-
Platform Pricing at Sports Card Conventions
Rysman, Marc, (2012)
- More ...