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Antitrust limits to patent settlements

Title
Antitrust limits to patent settlements
Author
Carl Shapiro, University of California at Berkeley
Date
1/01/2005
(Original Publish Date: 2003)
Abstract
Patents, patent litigation, and patent settlements increasingly influence competition. Settlements of patent disputes come in many forms, including licensing and cross-licensing agreements, patent pools, mergers, and joint ventures. While frequently pro competitive, such settlements can stifle competition and harm consumers. I propose a specific antitrust rule limiting such settlements: a settlement must leave consumers at least as well off as they would have been from ongoing patent litigation. After establishing that profitable settlements satisfying this constraint generally exist, I show how this antitrust rule can be used to evaluate three types of settlements: mergers, patent pools, and negotiated entry dates.
Link
Full Text (PDF) from University of California, Berkeley: Haas School of Business
Technical Areas
  • Antitrust (see also "Economics")
  • Antitrust (see also "Litigation and Legal Issues")
  • Economics
  • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
  • Litigation & Legal Issues
  • Patents
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