The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the South Korean Intellectual Property Office are expanding cooperation in patent classification activities, they said in a news release Thursday (http://1.usa.gov/1kGlqxy). South Korean regulators will increase the number of technical areas in which they classify patent documents using the joint U.S.-EU Cooperative Patent Classification system, they said. PTO said the change will make it easier to find existing South Korean patents and apply for new patents in South Korea.
PCCW, owner of Hong Kong Telecommunications, is giving Londoners its first taste of what it calls “fiber-fast broadband without the wires.” This week, PCCW subsidiary UK Broadband launches the “Relish” plug-and-play service, which uses 4G mobile broadband to give homes and offices in the city’s central zone up to 65 Mbps and on average 30 Mbps of broadband with no landline needed. A home Ethernet/Wi-Fi router costs 50 pounds (about $84 at 1 pound = $1.67) to buy and 20 pounds ($33) a month for service with unlimited data. A pocket hub costs 35 pounds ($59) to buy and serves up to 10 devices for 10 pounds ($17) a month. Users who sign up for a year for both services get free hardware and reduced prices. The home router works only in London (with other urban areas promised), but the pocket hub roams for free on the “Three” 3G network outside London. Customers order from Relish by phone or online and get a ready-to-use device delivered, in a pizza-style box, the next day. A postcode database advises where in London the devices should and should not work. If reception is impossible, such as in a basement, there is a money-back guarantee. PCCW Group and UK Broadband are licensed to use six 20 MHz channels in 4G LTE Bands 42/43 (at 3.5 GHz). Relish is only using one channel for the London service. The cost of the hardware, made by Huawei, is kept down by dedication to a limited range of channels. Relish cites data by the Centre for Economics and Business Research, showing London homes and small businesses are paying 193 million pounds a year on landlines they neither want nor use, just to get broadband, and that 47 percent of Londoners would prefer broadband without a landline.
"The global supply of IPv4 addresses is reaching a critical level,” and has prompted ICANN to start “allocating the remaining blocks” of IPv4 addresses to the “five Regional Internet Registries,” said an ICANN news release (http://bit.ly/1jV7Y3F) Tuesday. The allocation was “triggered” when the Latin American and Caribbean Network Information Centre’s supply of IPv4 addresses “dropped to below 8 million,” it said. “As more and more devices come online, the demand for IP addresses rises, and IPv4 is incapable of supplying enough addresses to facilitate this expansion,” it said. “This redistribution of the small pool of IPv4 addresses held by us ensures that every region receives an equal number of addresses while we continue to work with the community to raise support for IPv6,” said ICANN’s Elise Gerich, vice president-technical operations and the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority. “IPv6 deployment is a requirement for any network that needs to survive,” said Leo Vegoda, ICANN operational excellence manager. The policies guiding IPv4 allocation are on ICANN’s website (http://bit.ly/1tkCuvj).
Netflix plans to expand to Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg and Switzerland toward the end of the year, said a company news release (http://nflx.it/R78GDZ) Tuesday. The company has more than 48 million members in more than 40 countries, it said. Netflix expanded its services to Canada in September 2010, Latin America in September 2011, and the U.K. and Ireland in January 2012. The company said it also opened its services to Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden in 2012 and the Netherlands in 2013.
"It is a long-standing policy that we do not comment on intelligence matters,” said the U.K. Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) Wednesday in response to the filing Tuesday by Privacy International of a complaint alleging the security service hacks computers and mobile devices (CD May 14 p18). All of GCHQ’s work “is carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate, and that there is rigorous oversight,” a GCHQ spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “All our operational processes rigorously support this position."
Using malicious software to hack into computers or mobile devices is a clear violation of the European Convention on Human Rights, said Privacy International on Tuesday. It filed in the U.K. Investigatory Powers Tribunal what it said was the first U.K. challenge to the use of hacking tools by intelligence services (http://bit.ly/1iP47cx). PI argued that the infection of devices with malicious software, enabling covert intrusion into the lives of ordinary people, is so invasive that it’s incompatible with democratic principles and human rights standards. Given that the Government Communications Headquarters and its partner, the U.S. NSA, have no clear lawful authority to hack, their conduct is illegal and must be stopped immediately, PI said. GCHQ had no immediate comment.
The Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) bill (HR-3830, S-1900) should “prioritize the role of the Internet economy,” said a letter (http://bit.ly/1fKUbSa) led by Reps. Darrell Issa, R-California, and Jared Polis, D-Colorado, to House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp, R-Michigan, ranking member Sander Levin, D-Michigan, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, and ranking member Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. The TPA “rightfully recognizes the key role that the Internet plays in international trade today,” but “does not extend that vision of the importance of the Internet economy throughout its provisions,” said the letter. The bill “states the overall trade negotiating objectives of the United States with respect to any agreement with a foreign country to reduce or eliminate existing tariffs or nontariff barriers of that country or the United States that are unduly burdening and restricting U.S. trade” (http://1.usa.gov/1qbEQP3).
Samsung Electronics, charged with violating EU antitrust law by misusing standard essential patents (SEPs) is “pleased to have reached an amicable settlement with the European Commission,” it said Wednesday. The deal “implies no wrongdoing” by the company and ends the competition investigation, it said. Samsung believes the agreement will reduce uncertainties and give the industry more clarity, it said. The settlement also shows the company’s “commitment to finding solutions which balance the interests of both [intellectual property] licensors and licensees,” it said. The EC cited Samsung and Motorola Mobility for using SEP-based injunctions to gain more advantageous licensing terms that could harm consumers and innovation (CD April 30 p22).
Growing and competing demands for spectrum will “require a mix of spectrum repurposing and increased sharing,” said the U.K. Office of Communications in a spectrum management strategy released Wednesday (http://bit.ly/1fsjMPO). Ofcom said it expects in coming years a continuing emphasis on repurposing some bands as a way of addressing changing spectrum needs, as well as more spectrum sharing among different uses. Its 10-year strategy will be to: (1) Proactively explore new forms of spectrum sharing. (2) Maintain its focus on coexistence challenges associated with changes in spectrum use. (3) Promote improvements in radio frequency performance standards to reduce coexistence issues. (4) Boost the quantity and quality of information available on spectrum use. (5) Take a leading role in key international spectrum forums. Ofcom will address future mobile data demands and put in place its strategy for the 700 MHz band. It will support the government’s release of spectrum to private parties and address challenges arising from future wireless mic spectrum uses. The regulator also said it will enable growth and innovation in machine-to-machine/Internet of Things (IoT) applications, and help the government address the future wireless communication needs of emergency services. Ofcom outlined its plans for spectrum sharing in a separate document (http://bit.ly/1fsjMPO). To encourage wider use of spectrum sharing, Ofcom said it will: (1) Carry out further studies into the risk that future extension of the 5 GHz band for license-exempt Wi-Fi could cause new coexistence issues with incumbents. (2) Continue to monitor spectrum usage by Wi-Fi devices to provide an early warning of possible congestion. (3) Investigate the feasibility of making new shared spectrum bands available for mobile broadband. (4) Look into the possibility of making more narrowband shared spectrum available below 1 GHz to help meet emerging IoT spectrum demands. (5) Seek to extend the application of the geolocation database approach beyond TV white spaces and consider a tiered spectrum approach. (6) Pilot measures for pre-agreeing arrangements for research and development access for bands of special interest for innovation.
Motorola Mobility and Samsung Electronics infringed EU antitrust law by misusing standard essential patents (SEPs), the European Commission said Tuesday. SEPs are patents essential for implementing a specific industry standard, it said in an FAQ (http://bit.ly/1m7en3s). It’s impossible to manufacture standard-compliant products such as smartphones or tablets without using technologies covered by one or more SEPs, it said. SEPs can confer significant market power on their holders which they wouldn’t have had without the standard, the EC said. Since standards benefit consumers and businesses in terms of interoperability and innovation, standardized technology must be accessible to all interested parties subject to reasonable conditions, it said. To ensure that access, standard-setting bodies require that patent holders agree to license their SEPs on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms to address the issue of market power, it said. The EC wants to stop SEP holders from using SEP-based injunctions to extract licensing conditions that may hamper competition and hurt consumers, and SEP holders should be entitled to appropriate remuneration for the SEPs, it said. The EC accepted several legally binding commitments from Samsung to settle an antitrust case. One is that for five years, Samsung won’t seek injunctions in the European Economic Area, on the basis of any present and future SEPs relating to technologies for smartphones and tablets, against any company that agrees to a particular licensing framework for the relevant SEPs. The licensing framework calls for a negotiating period of up to 12 months, after which, if there’s no agreement, FRAND terms will be determined by a third-party arbitrator such as court, the EC said. The commitments will be monitored by an independent trustee, it said. The EC also said Motorola violated antitrust law by seeking and enforcing an injunction against Apple in a German court on the basis of a smartphone SEP after it had agreed to take a license and be bound by a determination of FRAND royalties by a court. The EC also said it was anticompetitive of Motorola to insist, by threatening to enforce its injunction, that Apple give up its right to challenge the validity or infringement by Apple’s mobile devices of Motorola SEPs. Samsung had no comment. Motorola agrees that injunctions should only be sought against unwilling licensees, and in this case it followed the procedure set by the German courts, spokeswoman Katie Dove told us. “We are now evaluating the EC’s decision."