The United States Federal Trade Commission’s case against Qualcomm has just taken an important step. In a ruling released last night, the US District Court judge Lucy Koh issued her final ruling on the case, finding in favor of the FTC that Qualcomm has violated the Federal Trade Commission Act. As part of her ruling, Koh also outlined a series of remedies that Qualcomm would need to undertake, including terminating its “no license, no chips” policy, and undergoing 7 years of Federal oversight. Qualcomm for its part was quick to react to the ruling, announcing that it will seek an immediate stay of the ruling as well as appeal to a higher court.

First filed back at the start of 2017, the FTC alleged that Qualcomm undertook multiple anticompetitive actions, including that the company refused to follow FRAND practices on its patents, and that it used its leverage to force device manufacturers to use its modems by making competing modems more expensive via royalties. The FTC also alleged that Qualcomm worked to prevent the adoption of competing (non-LTE) technologies altogether.

Under the lengthy findings of fact document, Koh sided with the FTC on virtually all matters, ruling that Qualcomm abused its market position in several manners. This includes unfair licensing practices under the “no license, no chips” policy, which required customers to license Qualcomm patents in order to buy its baseband processors, refusing to license its standards-essential patents under FRAND terms, and by engaging in anti-competitive exclusivity deals with companies like Apple. Getting right to the heart of the matter, the judge noted that “Qualcomm’s licensing practices have strangled competition in the CDMA and premium LTE modem chip markets for years, and harmed rivals, OEMs, and end consumers in the process.”

Koh in turn ordered several remedies that Qualcomm will be required to undertake, in order to prevent future abuse.

  1. Qualcomm must not condition the supply of modem chips on a customer’s patent license status and Qualcomm must negotiate or renegotiate license terms with customers in good faith under conditions free from the threat of lack of access to or discriminatory provision of modem chip supply or associated technical support or access to software.
  2. Qualcomm must make exhaustive SEP licenses available to modem-chip suppliers on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (“FRAND”) terms and to submit, as necessary, to arbitral or judicial dispute resolution to determine such terms.
  3. Qualcomm may not enter express or de facto exclusive dealing agreements for the supply of modem chips.
  4. Qualcomm may not interfere with the ability of any customer to communicate with a government agency about a potential law enforcement or regulatory matter.
  5. In order to ensure Qualcomm’s compliance with the above remedies, the Court orders Qualcomm to submit to compliance and monitoring procedures for a period of seven (7) years. Specifically, Qualcomm shall report to the FTC on an annual basis Qualcomm’s compliance with the above remedies ordered by the Court.

In short, Qualcomm must cease requiring chip buyers to buy Qualcomm patent licenses, and when Qualcomm does license out its standards-essential patents, they must follow FRAND terms when doing so. On this particular point, Judge Koh found that Qualcomm’s royalty rates were “unreasonably high”, with the company sometimes charging “OEMs higher royalty rates when OEMs purchase rivals’ chips than when OEMs purchase Qualcomm’s chips, which further harms rivals.”

The ordered remedies are also designed to address Qualcomm’s exclusivity agreements, all but barring the company from entering into such agreements again. Along with the well-known case of Apple, Qualcomm was found to have entered into de facto agreements with LGE, BlackBerry, Samsung, and VIVO. Tangentially, Qualcomm is also prohibited from interfering with customers’ communications with regulators. In particular, Koh found that Qualcomm paid Samsung $100 Million as part of a settlement agreement to silence the company’s antitrust complaints.

Finally, in order to enforce the four major points above, Qualcomm is being ordered to undergo Federal monitoring for the next seven years. Specifically, the company will be required to report to the FTC about its compliance efforts on an annual basis. In justifying the monitoring order, Judge Koh noted that Qualcomm has a history of misbehavior, writing that “Qualcomm’s failure to alter its unlawful licensing practices despite years of foreign government investigations, findings, and fines suggests an obstinance that a monitoring provision may address.”

Ultimately however, it will be up to the US Ninth Circuit Court to decide whether any of these remedies go into effect. Qualcomm has announced that it will request a stay on the ruling while seeking an appeal to the Ninth Circuit, which would decide on whether it wants to hear the case, and if a stay will be issued in the interim. Should they decide to hear the case, then it’s likely that this case could go on for a couple of years longer still.

In the meantime, however, the ruling comes as the cellular modem market has already contracted under pressure. Intel famously bowed out of the 5G market just last month, as Apple and Qualcomm have settled their differences and Apple will resume being a Qualcomm customer. Meanwhile of the remaining competitors in the 5G market, Huawei has its own legal problems right now, leaving just Samsung, MediaTek, and some smaller players to compete against Qualcomm. Intel was the closest within the US in the 4G era – notably winning large portions of iPhone orders – so it remains to be seen how well the remaining competition can fare against a very dominant Qualcomm.

Source: US FTC vs. Qualcomm: Findings of Fact and Conclussions of Law

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  • id4andrei - Wednesday, May 22, 2019 - link

    This is the end of Qualcomm's licensing business. R&D into the next gen standards cannot be sustained by a percentage of the chip instead of the whole device.
  • Raqia - Wednesday, May 22, 2019 - link

    Only a small number of essential patents are practiced on the modem itself, many are practiced in the device, on the cell towers, and in the interfaces between all of these parts; those can be split off as required by Koh's judgment and the rest licensed at the device level. As they are assessed off of the first $400 of a device's retail cost, they really constitute a discount off a fixed cost for makers of devices that have lesser data requirements and make less intensive use of standards. There are also many non-essential patents unencumbered by FRAND that Qualcomm own outside these essential patents; recently a jury awarded $1.41 per device for 3 of these (presumably 3 of the better ones).

    Furthermore, the nature of standards is separate from implementation: the same modem can be configured to talk to a cell tower in multiple ways and Qualcomm's innovative and technically sound standards are what the industry chose despite being patented by Qualcomm and subject to licensing fees. It may alter licensing, but it is unlikely to affect Qualcomm's model when many OEMs actually prefer the status quo and sourcing solutions to difficult problems from someone who is more efficient at it than themselves.
  • magreen - Friday, May 24, 2019 - link

    "Qualcomm's innovative and technically sound standards"
    ---
    I agree with the comment above. You sound like a shill.
  • Raqia - Saturday, May 25, 2019 - link

    Or maybe I actually have some understanding of the nature and scope of these standards and haven't swallowed a story spoon fed to me (and the FTC) by Apple. They're not just a bunch of gate keeping measure designed to just keep out competition, they really are brilliant inventions that the industry adopted IN SPITE of the fact that they were subject to licensing because of their value to the industry in spectrum conservation, speed to market and technical soundness.

    Many people, the judge included misunderstand exactly what's being licensed. The standards are not the modem, the standards are a kind of electromagnetic grammar enabling things like multiple users communicating with cellular towers, tower hand off, error correction, power conservation etc. As such, modems can be configured to process standards not invented by Qualcomm and Qualcomm's standards can also be processed by things like x86/ARM CPUs or FPGAs rather than modems (although it'd be slower and hotter.)
  • s.yu - Wednesday, May 22, 2019 - link

    If the US actions are so politically charged they'd certainly postpone this until Huawei's done for good.
  • Skeptical123 - Wednesday, May 22, 2019 - link

    The reality is the us is a function democracy (mostly...) so while there are definitely political moves there are also independent law enforcement acts taken like this one that are not directly related to politics. While it might be strategic for the US to hold on actions again Qualcomm we don't have a central all powerful planing party (like China) to take such actions.
  • IUU - Saturday, May 25, 2019 - link

    It's not about QQom, violating anti-trust laws. It's about QQom kicking Apple's ass in every aspect where Apple's bread and butter is, smartphones.

    Let's be frank . No-one has ever given a damn , about justice, but all were interested in money , no matter under the disguise of ethics or lawfulness.

    Because, just give it a serious consideration even if for a few moments. QQom may well be guilty of more than it is already charged. But if a break is not put to its current acceleration Apple is as good as dead. And the latter is also not exactly the model of ethics and lawfulness too. But no charges are being pressed at the moment.

    I wish most was guided by law. Most "corrective" measures are oppotunistic and almost always hide intentionality.

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