Today Fox Business is reporting U.S. and European regulators approved
Google Inc's $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility on Monday and
said they would keep a sharp eye on the web search giant to ensure
patents critical to the telecom industry would be licensed at fair
prices. The U.S. Justice Department also approved an Apple Inc -led
consortium's purchase of a trove of patents from bankrupt Canadian
company Nortel Networks.Both the Justice Department and European
antitrust authorities said that they would monitor how patents are used
to ensure they comply with antitrust rules. Antitrust enforcers on both
sides of the Atlantic are concerned that patents essential to ensuring
communications devices sold by different companies work together are
licensed for a reasonable fee.
"The (Justice Department's antitrust) division will not hesitate to take
appropriate enforcement action to stop any anticompetitive use of SEP
(standard essential patent) rights," the department said in a statement.
Google, whose Android software is the top operating system for
Internet-enabled smart phones, said in August that it would buy
phone-maker Motorola for its 17,000 patents and 7,500 patent
applications, as it looks to compete with rivals such as Apple and
defend itself and Android manufacturers in patent litigations.
The deal will give Google one of the mobile phone industry's largest
patent libraries, as well as hardware manufacturing operations that will
allow Google to develop its own line of smart phones.Google, the newest
major entrant to the mobile market, is already being sued for patent
infringement by Oracle Corp , which is seeking up to $6 billion.
The legal battles over patents between various technology and smartphone
firms has prompted the European Commission to open an investigation
into legal tactics used by Samsung Electronics against Apple and whether
these breach EU antitrust rules.
Google's move to buy Motorola Mobility came shortly after it tried and
failed to buy Nortel's patents. The winner was an Apple-led consortium,
which includes Research in Motion Ltd, Microsoft Corp, EMC Corp,
Ericsson and Sony Corp, which agreed in July to pay $4.5 billion for
6,000 patents and patent applications.
Source: Fox Business
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