Industries are turning to a shared licensing model to navigate dense, overlapping patent landscapes and speed up innovation. Espie Angelica A. de Leon explores its real-world impact, strategic trade-offs and when joining makes sense.
The smartphone. A modern device consisting of multiple technologies – user interface, wireless, image processing, data processing, hardware design, 5G and others – all of them patented.
How do smartphone manufacturers put all of these parts and features together in one powerhouse innovation while navigating transactions with various patent holders and accessing these technologies?
The answer is patent pooling.
Patent pools work like package deals. It is the practice of two or more patent owners to aggregate their patents on related technologies and offer them for licensing as a single bundle. They license this pool of patents among themselves or to third parties.
Patent pooling is frequently seen in industries where a single product combines multiple complex technologies and patents, including those with unified technical standards, dense patent ownership, strong supply chain coordination, and where interoperability and technical standards are critical.
These industries include telecommunications, consumer electronics, automotive technologies, Internet of Things (IoT), semiconductors, healthcare, biotechnology and certain clean‑tech applications.
“These industries often face issues like overlapping patents, high licensing costs and frequent lawsuits,” said Xia Zheng, founder and patent attorney at AFD China in Beijing.
One example of a patent pool is Denver, Colorado-based MPEG LA, a consortium of MPEG-2 patent owners in technology standards. MPEG-2 is the standard format for DVD, Blu-ray and digital television. MPEG LA was acquired in May 2023 and now operates as a division of San Francisco-based Via Licensing,
Another is Medicines Patent Pool (MPP). With backing from the United Nations, MPP is an international public health organization working to provide expanded access to affordable medicines and technologies essential to the treatment of HIV, hepatitis C, Covid-19, cancer and other priority diseases.
Benefits of patent pooling
Patent pools benefit licensors, licensees or users and consumers.
“A patent pool allows a single licensor to license to many users, or many licensors to license to many users through one platform. This avoids the need for repeated, complicated one-on-one negotiations between patent owners and users, significantly lowering licensing costs and improving efficiency,” Zheng explained.
“For licensees, it reduces negotiation time, legal costs and uncertainty by providing access to multiple essential patents through a single license,” said Kate Wilson, an IP strategist at James & Wells in Auckland.
It increases licensing uptake, generates more predictable revenue streams and reduces enforcement costs as well.
If the patent pool is well-structured, it can also help lessen the risk of litigation.
While cutting negotiation time, costs and litigation risks, patent pooling also promotes collaborative innovation and standardized technologies such as 5G, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.
In essence, patent pooling offers a buffet of benefits.
In telecommunications such as 5G and WiFi, a smartphone involves thousands of patents, as mentioned above. Patent pooling simplifies licensing transactions, which would have been lengthy and complex, and reduces cross-border disputes.
In video and audio technology, there are common standards to comply with. With scattered patents, treading the licensing path will be difficult. However, a patent pool will make things simpler and cheaper.
The supply chain in the new energy and electric vehicles industry is long. Furthermore, technologies are closely connected. A patent pool helps share technology and lower risks.
In semiconductors, patents are deeply intertwined across different stages. Patent pooling once again comes to the rescue by bringing together key patents and reducing the possibility of lawsuits.
Smart manufacturing and the industrial internet also rely on unified standards. With patent pools, collaborative innovation is possible.
Patent pooling is likewise prevalent in the home appliances and smart homes industries to avoid internal disputes and boost global competitiveness.
“Also, depending upon the deal structure, the pooled or bundled rights can be more readily selectively licensed to different parties, industries or jurisdictions – ultimately expanding the overall market,” Wilson noted. As such, patented technologies are transformed into real-world products and applications at a faster pace. This is especially important for emerging industries and, of course, consumers.
In healthcare, for example, patent pools allow rapid delivery of more affordable medicines in the market, benefitting people from low- and middle-income countries.