July 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. judge who tossed out one of the biggest court cases in Apple Inc's smartphone technology battle
is questioning whether patents should cover software or most
other industries at all.
Richard Posner, a prolific jurist who sits on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago, told Reuters this week that
the technology industry's high profits and volatility made
patent litigation attractive for companies looking to wound
competitors.
"It's a constant struggle for survival," he said in his
courthouse chambers, which have a sparkling view of Monroe
Harbor on Lake Michigan. "As in any jungle, the animals will use
all the means at their disposal, all their teeth and claws that
are permitted by the ecosystem."
Posner, 73, was appointed as a federal appeals court judge
by President Ronald Reagan in 1981 and has written dozens of
books, including one about economics and intellectual property
law.
Posner, who teaches at the University of Chicago,
effectively ended Apple's lawsuit against Google Inc's
Motorola Mobility unit last month. He canceled a closely
anticipated trial between the two and rejected the iPhone
maker's request for an injunction barring the sale of Motorola
products using Apple's patented technology.
Apple is in a pitched battle with its competitors over
patents, as technology companies joust globally for consumers in
the fast-growing markets for smartphones and tablet computers.
Posner said some industries, like pharmaceuticals, had a
better claim to intellectual property protection because of the
enormous investment it takes to create a successful drug.
Advances in software and other industries cost much less, he
said, and the companies benefit tremendously from being first in
the market with gadgets - a benefit they would still get if
there were no software patents.
"It's not clear that we really need patents in most
industries," he said.
Also, devices like smartphones have thousands of component
features, and they all receive legal protection.
"You just have this proliferation of patents," Posner said.
"It's a problem."
GENERATION SMARTPHONE
The Apple/Motorola case did not land in front of Posner by
accident. He volunteered to oversee it.
Federal appellate judges occasionally offer to preside over
district court cases. Posner had alerted the district judges of
his interest in patents, so after part of the smartphone battle
landed in Wisconsin federal court, the judge there transferred
the case to him.
When Posner began working on the smartphone case, he told
the litigants he was "really neutral" because he used a
court-issued BlackBerry made by Research In Motion Ltd.
He soon accepted an upgrade to an iPhone, but only uses it to
check email and call his wife, he said.
"I'm not actually that interested in becoming part of the
smartphone generation," he said.
Posner's corner office is filled with the requisite library
of law tomes, and a row of books he wrote sits alongside his
family photographs. He also has a signed photograph from the
late Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan Jr., for whom he
clerked in the early 1960s.
Judges rarely speak openly to the press, but Posner is
outspoken on a range of topics. Last week in online magazine
Slate, he penned a withering critique of U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Antonin Scalia's recent dissent in the Arizona
immigration case.
"It wouldn't surprise me if Justice Scalia's opinion were
quoted in campaign ads," Posner wrote.
MOTOROLA V. APPLE
Motorola sued Apple in October 2010, a move that was widely
seen as a pre-emptive strike. Apple filed its own claims against
Motorola the same month.
In canceling the trial, Posner said an injunction barring
the sale of Motorola phones would harm consumers. He also
rejected the idea of trying to ban an entire phone based on
patents that cover individual features like the smooth operation
of streaming video.
Apple's patent, Posner wrote in his June 22 order, "is not a
claim to a monopoly of streaming video!"
Not all judges in the patent wars share Posner's skepticism
of injunctions. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose,
California, granted Apple two critical pretrial injunctions
against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd last week: one
against the Galaxy Tab 10.1, and the other against the Galaxy
Nexus phone.
In Friday's 101-page ruling barring the Galaxy Nexus, Koh
cited the harms to Apple due to competition from phones that
infringe its patent on the Siri search feature. Samsung is
appealing both injunctions.
Posner said he had not read Koh's orders.
In his own ruling, Posner also barred Motorola from seeking
an injunction against the iPhone because the company had pledged
to license its patent on fair and reasonable terms to other
companies - in exchange for having the technology adopted as an
industry standard.
Posner's idea of examining whether industries like software
should receive patent protection is a mainstream one, especially
in the computer industry, said John Allison, a professor at
University of Texas at Austin who studies intellectual property
rights.
However, recent patent law reforms passed by the U.S.
Congress did not directly address the issue, and Allison said
classifying industries for the purposes of intellectual property
protection - as Posner suggests - was "completely impractical"
because talented lawyers could game the system.
When it comes to the smartphone litigation wars, Posner said
tech companies should not be blamed for jumping into court since
they are merely taking the opportunities that the legal system
offers.
Given the large cash reserves in Silicon Valley, high legal
fees are not a deterrent. Apple, for instance, had $110 billion
in cash and securities as of March 31.
"It's a small expense for them," Posner said.
Posner said he had been looking forward to presiding over a
trial between Motorola and Apple, but had no other choice than
to toss the case.
"I didn't think I could have a trial just for fun," he said.
(Reporting by Dan Levine)
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