The Debate Over Standard Essential Patents
A Regulatory Transparency Project Fourth Branch Video
A Regulatory Transparency Project Fourth Branch Video
Standardized technologies make it possible for devices and equipment to have common components so, for instance, a pair of headphones can plug into any headphone jack. These technologies are often developed through expensive and timely research so many of them are protected by standard essential patents (SEPs). This type of patent allows the holder to retain rights to the new technology while also charging a reasonable fee for others to utilize the invention. In 2013, the Department of Justice and the US Patent and Trademark Office announced that SEPs posed a threat to competition and should not have the same protections as other types of patents. In 2019, however, the Department of Justice, the US Patent and Trademark Office, now joined by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, revised that policy, urging that SEPs be treated the same as other types of patents. In 2022, the Biden administration rescinded the 2019 policy without issuing a new policy statement. Instead, it announced that agencies should apply the same general laws to SEPs that apply to all other property rights. Will this spur or reduce technological innovation?
Brian O’Shaughnessy is the Senior Vice President for Public Policy at the Licensing Executives Society (LES) of the United States and Canada. Any expressed opinion in this video is his own, and not attributable to LES.
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As always, the Federalist Society takes no position on particular legal or public policy issues; all expressions of opinion are those of the speaker.
Partner, Dinsmore Partner, Dinsmore & Shohl LLP, USA & Canada
Brian O’Shaughnessy is an internationally recognized authority in licensing and commercial transactions involving intellectual property rights. He is a Partner in the Washington DC office of Dinsmore & Shohl LLP; and the President and Chair of the Board of the Licensing Executives Society (USA and Canada), Inc.,
Mr. O’Shaughnessy assists clients in developing international intellectual property portfolios; IP-risk avoidance strategies; post-grant proceedings at the USPTO; and other IP-related disputes. He has also been retained as a consulting and testifying expert witness in disputes involving technology licensing. He works with life sciences companies in lifecycle management strategies, and in bringing and resolving Hatch-Waxman litigation. His wide-ranging experience affords a diverse perspective and creative solutions to intellectual property management, licensing, enforcement, and risk avoidance.
Brian has served on the LES USA & Canada Board of Trustees since 2007. Most recently, his Board duties included responsibility for the Society’s public policy positions and external education, including congressional outreach; and, prior to that, he served as Trustee for Education.
Brian has been acknowledged as among the “IAM Strategy 300”, the world’s leading IP strategists, and among the “The World’s Leading Patent and Technology Licensing Lawyers”, by Intellectual Asset Management Magazine. In 2013, Brian was awarded the Outstanding Alumnus Award by his alma mater, Rochester Institute of Technology; and, in 2005, was awarded the RIT College of Science Distinguished Alumnus Award.