MPEG LA (Intellectual Property Law)

 

MPEG LA 

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MPEG Licensing Administration, LLC
Type
Private
IndustryLicensing administration
Founded1996; 24 years ago
Headquarters
Denver, Colorado
US
Key people
Larry Horn
ProductsPatent licenses
Websitewww.mpegla.com

MPEG LA is an American company based in DenverColorado that licenses patent pools covering essential patents required for use of the MPEG-2MPEG-4IEEE 1394VC-1ATSCMVCMPEG-2 SystemsAVC/H.264 and HEVC standards.

History

MPEG LA started operations in July 1997 immediately after receiving a Department of Justice Business Review Letter. During formation of the MPEG-2 standard, a working group of companies that participated in the formation of the MPEG-2 standard recognized that the biggest challenge to adoption was efficient access to essential patents owned by many patent owners. That ultimately led to a group of various MPEG-2 patent owners to form MPEG LA, which in turn created the first modern-day patent pool as a solution. The majority of patents underlying MPEG-2 technology are owned by three companies: Sony (311 patents), Thomson (198 patents) and Mitsubishi Electric (119 patents).

In June 2012, MPEG LA announced a call for patents essential to the High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) standard.

In September 2012, MPEG LA launched Librassay, which makes diagnostic patent rights from some of the world's leading research institutions available to everyone through a single license. Organizations which have included patents in Librassay include Johns Hopkins UniversityLudwig Institute for Cancer ResearchMemorial Sloan Kettering Cancer CenterNational Institutes of Health (NIH); Partners HealthCare; The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University; The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania; The University of California, San Francisco; and Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF).

On September 29, 2014, the MPEG LA announced their HEVC license which covers the patents from 23 companies. The license is US$0.20 per HEVC product after the first 100,000 units each year with an annual cap. The license has been expanded to include the profiles in version 2 of the HEVC standard.

On March 5, 2015, the MPEG LA announced their DisplayPort license which is US$0.20 per DisplayPort product.

Criticism

MPEG LA has claimed that video codecs such as Theora and VP8 infringe on patents owned by its licensors, without disclosing the affected patent or patents.[20] They then called out for “any party that believes it has patents that are essential to the VP8 video codec”.[21] In April 2013, Google and MPEG LA announced an agreement covering the VP8 video format.

In May 2010, Nero AG filed an antitrust suit against MPEG LA, claiming it "unlawfully extended its patent pools by adding non-essential patents to the MPEG-2 patent pool" and has been inconsistent in charging royalty fees. The United States District Court for the Central District of California dismissed the suit with prejudice on November 29, 2010.

David Balto, who is a former policy director at the Federal Trade Commission, has used the MPEG-2 patent pool as an example of why patent pools need more scrutiny so that they do not suppress innovation.

The MPEG-2 patent pool began with 100 patents in 1997 and since then additional patents have been added. As of 2013 the number of active/expired patents in the MPEG-2 patent pool is over 1,000. The MPEG-2 license agreement states that if possible the license fee will not increase when new patents are added. The MPEG-2 license agreement states that MPEG-2 royalties must be paid when there is one or more active patents in either the country of manufacture or the country of sale. The original MPEG-2 license rate was US$4 for a decoding license, US$4 for an encoding license and US$6.00 for encode-decode consumer product.

A criticism of the MPEG-2 patent pool is that even though the number of patents will decrease from 1,048 to 416 by June 2013 the license fee has not decreased with the expiration rate of MPEG-2 patents. For products from January 1, 2002 through December 31, 2009 royalties were US$2.50 for a decoding license, US$2.50 for an encoding license and US$2.50 for encode-decode consumer product license. Since January 1, 2010, MPEG-2 patent pool royalties are US$2.00 for a decoding license, US$2.00 for an encoding license and US$2.00 for encode-decode consumer product. By 2015 more than 90% of the MPEG-2 patents will have expired but as long as there are one or more active patents in the MPEG-2 patent pool in either the country of manufacture or the country of sale the MPEG-2 license agreement requires that licensees pay a license fee that does not change based on the number of patents that have expired.

H.264/MPEG-4 AVC licensors

The following organizations hold one or more patents in MPEG LA's H.264/AVC patent pool.

H.264/AVC patent holders (as of November 2020)
Organization[38]Active patentsExpired patentsTotal patents
Panasonic Corporation1,135621,197
Godo Kaisha IP Bridge1,111191,130
LG Electronics875115990
Dolby Laboratories75421775
Toshiba35734391
Microsoft17639215
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (including NTT Docomo)1872189
Sony11631147
Fraunhofer Society12516141
Google1363139
GE Video Compression1360136
Fujitsu9214106
Mitsubishi Electric5450104
Tagivan II LLC77077
Samsung Electronics234063
Maxell51253
Philips53944
Vidyo41243
Ericsson34034
Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) of Korea32032
Siemens151732
The Trustees of Columbia University in New York City02525
Polycom19120
Robert Bosch GmbH14519
Apple909
JVC Kenwood358
Orange S.A.077
Sharp Corporation505
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)145
Cisco Systems404
ZTE Corporation022
Cisco Technology101
Cable Television Laboratories, Inc.011
Hewlett-Packard Company011
LSI Corporation011
Newracom, Inc.011
Zhigu Holdings Limited011

HEVC licensors

The following organizations hold one or more patents in the HEVC patent pool.

HEVC patent holders (as of July 2019)
Organization[40]Active patentsExpired patentsTotal patents
Samsung Electronics3,55043,554
M&K Holdings[41]9070907
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (including NTT Docomo)8782880
JVC Kenwood Corporation6280628
Infobridge Pte. Ltd.[42]5720572
SK Telecom (including SK Planet)3800380
KT Corp2890289
NEC Corporation2190219
Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) of Korea2080208
Canon Inc.1800180
Tagivan II1620162
Fujitsu1441145
Kyung Hee University1030103
Apple69069
Intellectual Discovery Co.67067
Maxell60060
IBEX PT Holdings58058
Vidyo41041
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)38038
HUMAX Holdings32032
Kwangwoon University24024
Siemens13821
Korean Broadcasting System20020
Orange S.A.20020
BBC19019
The Trustees of Columbia University in New York City01616
Sejong University13013
Korea Aerospace University12012
Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology10010
Sungkyunkwan University808
Nippon Hoso Kyokai (NHK)707
Sky Media Tech, Inc.303
Digital Insights Inc.202
Alpha Digitech101
MIT101
Newracom (Newratek)011

VC-1 licensors

The following organizations hold one or more patents in the VC-1 patent pool (as of November 2020).

OrganizationActive patentsExpired patentsTotal patents
Microsoft28638324
Panasonic5369122
LG Electronics316596
Samsung Electronics356196
Dolby Laboratories731689
Philips07777
Hitachi06060
Mitsubishi Electric25052
Sony32528
JVC Kenwood02525
Toshiba02121
Fujitsu02020
Telenor01919
Siemens9817
AT&T Intellectual Property01616
Sun Patent Trust11112
Sharp Corporation358
Orange S.A.077
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone044
Pantech044
ZTE011

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