IPCom

IPCom GmbH & Co. KG[1] is a German intellectual property rights licensing and technology R&D company.[2] Its R&D team actively contributes to communication standard setting bodies, focusing on 3GPP, while managing IPCom's global patent portfolio.[3] IPCom has been described as a patent troll[4][5][6] for its litigation practices.

IPCom holds over 200 patent families in the field of mobile communications, with more than 1,000 patents registered in Europe, the US and Asia, most of which have been granted. IPCom has negotiated and closed a number of significant license contracts and settlement agreements with high-profile, global companies in the mobile and telecoms space. These include a case pending with the German Supreme Court, against Nokia and HTC, whom IPCom claims have infringed its mobile telecoms European Patent (EP 1 841 268) (the 100A).[7]

IPCom also offers consulting services to companies in the telecoms space.[8]

IPCom is headquartered in Pullach, Munich, Germany.[9]

History

In 2007, IPCom acquired a portfolio of mobile technology patents from Robert Bosch GmbH.[10] This comprises more than 160 patent families in 2G, 2.5G, 3G and LTE technologies, 30 of which are SEPs covering the USA, Europe and Asia. Technologies covered in the portfolio span areas including interface, MMS and digital rights management, applications, synchronization and packet data transmission. [11]

In acquiring the Bosch patent portfolio, IPCom also acquired telecoms European Patent (EP 1 841 268) (the 100A), which in January 2018 was found by England’s Court of Appeal to be standard-essential and mandatory to the UMTS standard. 100A relates to controlling how UMTS mobile phones gain initial access to a network. Since then, IPCom has welcomed requests from handset manufacturers, service providers, and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to obtain FRAND license agreements. [12]

Through ongoing R&D activity, IPCom has also developed its own global patent portfolio, with numerous applications currently pending. [13]

References

Further reading

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