Ericsson licenses LTE technology

Ericsson licenses LTE technology

Lynnette Luna, FierceBroadbandWireless  |   June 29, 2009
Thumbnail: 

Ericsson said it has signed license agreements for LTE essential patents, claiming it is taking the lead in establishing an industry practice to promote healthy market growth of the technology and that it has the strongest LTE patent portfolio.

Back in April 2008, Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent, NEC, now defunct NextWave Wireless, Nokia, Nokia Siemens Networks and Sony Ericsson joined what they called a "mutual commitment to a framework for establishing predictable and more transparent maximum aggregate costs" for IPR relating to LTE. Basically, in pursuing bilateral agreements, the group agreed to support a reasonable maximum aggregate royalty level for LTE essential IPR in handsets as a single-digit percentage of the sales price. For notebooks, with embedded LTE capabilities, the companies support a single-digit dollar amount as the maximum aggregate royalty level.

While not revealing how many LTE licensing agreements it has signed, Ericsson said all of its LTE agreements will be made according to Ericsson's proportional share of the standard IPR that relates to the relevant product category. Ericsson likewise honors the same industry practice by ensuring a maximum cumulative rate on LTE technology not exceeding a single-digit rate.

"We aim to strike a balance between providing value for our customers and earning a fair return on our significant R&D investments when other parties have the opportunity to benefit from them," Kasim Alfalahi, Ericsson's vice president and head of IPR Licensing and Patent Portfolio, said in a statement.

 

Orignal Author: 
Lynnette Luna, FierceBroadbandWireless
Tags

Tell Us What You Think

Video from Telecom Channel

Improving support for internal applications
BT sets the bar high in improving applications support and reducing costs across all its operations, which can be ‘disruptive’
 

Frontpage Content by Category

Industry experts forecast trends in a decade. One key theme: the hardest decisions will not be about technologies, but the business models to monetize them

analystwire_opinion_blog

Operators now have a deadline
Spur to cross-platform competition
It's time for telcos to offload their engineering operations and focus creatively on the customer
The best RA tool is the professional’s mindset
CSL is the latest Hong Kong cellcos to bet on HSPA as a DSL substitute
A couch potato's dream, but it doesn't multitask well

Frontpage Content by Category

Understand cloud computing's capabilities and match those to non-core projects that can improve the bottom line
To monetize cloud services operators will have to be able to bill for them

Frontpage Content by Category with Image

The iPhone has swamped AT&T's data network and sparked a consumer rebellion. What can Ma Bell do?

Frontpage Content by Category with Image

Symmetricom
Testing and verifying IEEE 1588-2008 packet synchronization.
Broadband Forum
This paper establishes the Broadband Forum’s role in energy efficiency and dematerialization for vendors and service providers in the telecoms sector.

Frontpage Content by Category

Simplify roaming plans – but operators first need access to and control of vital user data that empower subscribers to personalize and control mobile data usage and service

wrap_lighter_side_tab