Apple's HTC patent lawsuit is a bluff

By Joe Wilcox
Beta News

Published March 14, 2010, 4:27 PM

http://www.betanews.com/joewilcox/article/Apples-HTC-patent-lawsuit-is-a-bluff/1268597261


Now that buzz about Apple's patent lawsuit against HTC has quieted a 
bit, I'm ready to pipe in with some contrarian analysis. I agree with 
other pundits suggesting that the lawsuit is competition by litigation, 
where Apple hopes to scare off mobile manufacturers from licensing 
Android. Surely some handset manufacturers will pull back, but they 
would be foolish to do so. For other existing and potential Android 
licensees, the lawsuit is a get out of jail free card. Apple's patent 
case should embolden, not restrain them. There may never to be a better 
time to license Android than now.

Apple claims infringement of 20 patents related to iPhone's user 
interface. Engadget's March 2nd patent breakdown is a must-read clinical 
analysis. But there's more to competition by litigation than the actual 
patents. Lawsuits often aren't so much about what's right but what 
lawyers think they can prove; often the winner tells the more believable 
story, even in patent cases. Similarly, much strategy goes into lawsuits 
-- how they're presented, where they're filed and when. Then, of course, 
there is whom. In this case, Apple took on HTC and not Google. Now why 
is that?

Apple's initial goals have little to do with protecting intellectual 
property as much as scaring away competitors. I hone in on this because 
Apple chose not to sue Google, Android's major developer, but instead 
the largest licensee of the mobile operating system. HTC's Sense UI 
gives Apple a bit more range to single out the one manufacturer, but 
based on various analyses of the patents that's more bark than bite.

Why not sue Google? I'll give eight primary reasons:

1) Apple potentially gains more by scaring off potential Android 
licensees than engaging in a protracted patent lawsuit. It's easier and 
more effective to raise bluster (and loads of free press) by engaging 
HTC than Google. Meanwhile, Apple can drag out the lawsuit as a 
distraction for HTC and other (frightened) Android licensees -- for years.

2) Apple doesn't want to take on Google, which already has come to HTC's 
defense. Google would fiercely fight Apple, understanding that mobile 
devices are the future of search and advertising.

3) Apple needs Google more than Google needs Apple. Unless Apple is 
willing to switch to Bing -- not a good idea considering iPhone buyer 
demographics -- Google search and maps are a necessary evil. If Google 
is willing to play tough with China, Apple is easy enough for Google to 
snuff off. Apple won't take on Google from a weaker position.

4) HTC is somewhat disadvantaged, being a Taiwan-based company. Google 
has home-court advantage (like Apple), making it a much more formidable 
opponent than HTC.

5) Patent lawsuits take years to resolve, hence Apple's separate 
complaint with the International Trade Commission. Again, Apple is using 
scare tactics to psychologically attack existing and potential Android 
licensees. So, this is quite similar to No. 1.

6) The patent claims are likely not as sure as they appear. Since most 
of the claims are really about Android, Google is the more sensible 
target of any lawsuit. If Apple lawyers were truly confident of winning 
against Google -- and in reasonable timeframe, they would file lawsuit 
against the search giant.

7) Android's open-source status creates all kinds of logistical and 
legal problems for Apple. The company really doesn't want to be labeled 
with a big Scarlet Letter as an open-source opponent. Apple has 
benefitted from open-source community development. It's a vocal group 
Apple doesn't want to piss off. Then there are all the nasty legal 
issues and potentially damaging precedents should Apple make a frontal 
open-source assault.

8) The iPhone-Android phone market looks much like the Mac-Windows PC 
market did in the 1980s and 1990s. Apple unsuccessfully sued Microsoft 
for infringing on Macintosh user-interface intellectual property. The 
lawsuit dragged on for years, ending in settlement in 1997. But what if 
in the early days of the Windows PC, Apple had sued clone king Compaq 
instead? Compaq was more vulnerable to a UI copyright claim than 
Microsoft, and other DOS/Windows licensees would have received the 
message to back off. By attacking HTC, Apple hopes to prevent a repeat 
"us against everyone else" scenario.

What Apple Fears

Apple has good reasons to fear Android. In the three months from 
December to February, Android's US smartphone subscriber share shot up 
from 2.8 perent to 7.1 percent. Worldwide, in 2009, Android smartphone 
market share -- based on sales -- rose from 0.5 percent to 3.9 percent, 
according to Gartner (The first Android phone, the T-Mobile G1, shipped 
in late 2008). Last month, Google CEO Eric Schmidt asserted that 60,000 
Android handsets are shipping by the day.

All this circles back to my claim that the patent lawsuit is a bluff. My 
reasoning:

1) Apple chose HTC, not Google. There is no immediate risk to any patent 
claims against HTC. Since the real claims are against Google, Apple may 
find the court -- or even the ITC -- reluctant to rule against an 
Android licensee in good faith. There is perceived risk, but none in the 
short term, which is long enough for a united Android front to do market 
damage against iPhone -- particularly in emerging markets.

2) Apple filed against HTC and not other licensees. Apple had its chance 
to take on Android licensees, choosing instead to go after one. HTC is 
enough:

     * If the claims are shaky.
     * If Apple is looking for one case to establish precedent.
     * If the more immediate objective is to scare off existing or 
would-be Android licensees.

HTC being enough for this lawsuit isn't enough to legally or even 
logistically hurt other Android licensees.

3) Apple is unlikely to sue other Android licensees anytime soon. A good 
legal strategy -- from cost and logistical perspectives -- is to make a 
single case. Rather than being afraid, existing and would-be Android 
licensees should feel emboldened by the HTC lawsuit. Behind the bluster, 
Apple has really given the all clear -- it's safe to go ahead; that's 
Apple's tell. Apple's bluff is meant to convince other licensees that 
they can't win; so they lay down their Android hands. Yes, Apple could 
file against other Android licensees, but the only immediate benefit 
would be to create more fear -- that licensees should fold their hands. 
Hardware manufacturers should look at Google's backing HTC; there is a 
heavy-sitting ally at the table across from Apple.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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