This article revisits the antitrust treatment of unilateral conduct in Standard Essential Patent (SEP) disputes in the EU, with particular focus on the landmark CJEU judgment in Huawei v ZTE and the way it has affected subsequent developments before national courts. It explains that while the court in Huawei significantly improved legal certainty both for SEP holders and their potential licensees, it also left open a number of crucial questions affecting everyday licensing practice. First, it is not entirely clear whether the liability of an SEP holder presupposes leveraging by a vertically integrated firm or can also arise in purely vertical or horizontal relationships. Secondly, the safe harbour procedure formulated in the judgment begs i...
In Europe disputes over SEPs are frequently litigated. In Huawei v ZTE, the CJEU gave a landmark jud...
In light of the judgment of the Fifth Section of the Court of Justice of July 16, 2015 relating to t...
In its landmark decision Huawei/ZTE the ECJ has sketched a conduct-based framework for negotiating F...
This article revisits the antitrust treatment of unilateral conduct in Standard Essential Patent (SE...
Intellectual property law and competition law have been playing an important role in the field of li...
The Huawei v ZTE preliminary ruling gave the Court of Justice of the European Union a first opportun...
The jurisprudence on standard-essential patents (SEPs) has evolved substantially in the last few yea...
The Huawei ruling identified the steps that owners and users of SEPs will have to follow in negotiat...
Competition law sets limits on the exercise of intellectual property rights by dominant companies, ...
Almost two years ago, on 16 July 2015, Europe’s highest court, the European Court of Justice (CJEU),...
peer reviewedThis paper describes the degree of obligation created by a FRAND commitment on the hold...
The judgment of the European Court of Justice (CJEU) in Huawei v. ZTE4 has provided valuable guidanc...
In dealing with applications for injunctive relief by the holders of FRAND-encumbered SEPs in the co...
The beneficial effects of standardization can be jeopardized by unwanted conduct of its participants...
The beneficial effects of standardization can be jeopardized by unwanted conduct of its participants...
In Europe disputes over SEPs are frequently litigated. In Huawei v ZTE, the CJEU gave a landmark jud...
In light of the judgment of the Fifth Section of the Court of Justice of July 16, 2015 relating to t...
In its landmark decision Huawei/ZTE the ECJ has sketched a conduct-based framework for negotiating F...
This article revisits the antitrust treatment of unilateral conduct in Standard Essential Patent (SE...
Intellectual property law and competition law have been playing an important role in the field of li...
The Huawei v ZTE preliminary ruling gave the Court of Justice of the European Union a first opportun...
The jurisprudence on standard-essential patents (SEPs) has evolved substantially in the last few yea...
The Huawei ruling identified the steps that owners and users of SEPs will have to follow in negotiat...
Competition law sets limits on the exercise of intellectual property rights by dominant companies, ...
Almost two years ago, on 16 July 2015, Europe’s highest court, the European Court of Justice (CJEU),...
peer reviewedThis paper describes the degree of obligation created by a FRAND commitment on the hold...
The judgment of the European Court of Justice (CJEU) in Huawei v. ZTE4 has provided valuable guidanc...
In dealing with applications for injunctive relief by the holders of FRAND-encumbered SEPs in the co...
The beneficial effects of standardization can be jeopardized by unwanted conduct of its participants...
The beneficial effects of standardization can be jeopardized by unwanted conduct of its participants...
In Europe disputes over SEPs are frequently litigated. In Huawei v ZTE, the CJEU gave a landmark jud...
In light of the judgment of the Fifth Section of the Court of Justice of July 16, 2015 relating to t...
In its landmark decision Huawei/ZTE the ECJ has sketched a conduct-based framework for negotiating F...