Showing posts with label NFC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NFC. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Apple v. Google v. Samsung Patent Value for NFC Smartphone Payment

Contrast value of Apple, Google, and Samsung patents for NFC smartphone payment that are issued in the USPTO as of 2Q, 2016:

To evaluate the economic value of patents for NFC smartphone payment, patents regarding the NFC-equipped smartphones and systems/applications for the mobile payments are searched and reviewed. WISDOMAIN’s automated patent valuation tool is used to estimate economic value of the identified key patents for NFC smartphone payment. WISDOMAIN’s automated patent valuation tool evaluates the economic value of a patent based on the market size, profit contribution, and technology lifecycle of a given patent.

Value
Apple
Google
Samsung
A0
1
A-
1
1
B+
3
2
3
B0
2
5
11
B-
2
4
C
4
7
No. of Patents
6
15
25
*A+ is the highest value


For more information, please contact Alex Lee at alexglee@techipm.com .


©2016 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved http://www.techipm.com/

Sunday, October 25, 2015

NFC Patents for Smartphone Mobile Payments Licensing Potential Assessment

NFC (Near field communication) is a short-range wireless technology that allows wireless connections between two devices for data exchange in various business transactions. NFC-enabled smartphones are one of major driver for current mobile payments (e.g., Samsung Pay and Apple Pay) market.

TechIPm researched patents for the NFC-equipped smartphones and systems/applications for the mobile payments, issued in the USPTO as of 2Q, 2015. TechIPm’s research identified more than 600 patents that are related to the NFC-enabled smartphone mobile payments. The identified NFC patents are classified by devices, systems, applications and their sub-components/systems. Among more than 80 IPR holders Sony (including Sony Ericsson) is the leader followed by Visa, NXP, Nokia, Broadcom and Samsung Electronics.

To evaluate the essentiality of a patent for the NFC smartphone mobile payments, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each identified NFC patent are compared to the industry standards for NFC technology (ISO and NFC Forum). The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation. More than 160 patents are selected as the potential candidates of the NFC standard essential patents (SEPs). Among more than 20 IPR holders, NXP is the leader followed by Sony, Broadcom, Round Rock, Samsung Electronics and Nokia.

To assess licensing potentials of the key IPR holders, forward citation based Amber Cluster Search was used. Identified NFC patents of a specific IPR holder were used as an input to the cluster search to evaluate licensing opportunities. All the values of licensing potential higher than one are aggregated for a specific potential licensee. Thus, higher in licensing potential value for a specific potential licensee means higher in licensing opportunity.

 Following figures summarize the NFC patents licensing potentials of Nokia, NXP and Visa.



 ©2015 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved http://www.techipm.com/




Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Technologies behind Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, Android Pay

Patents can provide insights regarding technical details for the smartphone payment transaction process such as Apple Pay, Samsung Pay and Android Pay. Followings illustrate the technical details for each step of the smartphone payment transaction process based on the related patents’ disclosures.

Step 1 The first step in the mobile payment transaction process is to initiate the wireless communication link between customer’s smartphone and Point of Sale (POS) terminal at a shop.

US8838023 (Method and device for active load modulation by inductive coupling; Inside Secure) illustrates the inductive coupling communication techniques adopted in the Near Field Communication (NFC) technology. The standard of NFC (e.g., ISO/IEC18092) defines two communication modes, an active mode (transmitting party) and a passive mode (receiving party). The transmitting and receiving devices are equipped with an antenna coil. The active device emits a magnetic field oscillating, for example, at 13.56 MHz, and sends data to the passive device by modulating the magnetic field: either modifying the impedance of the antenna coil of the passive device at the rate of a data-carrying load modulation signal (passive load modulation) or transmitting bursts of alternating magnetic field at the rate of the data carrying modulation signal (active load modulation). The magnetic field bursts are perceived by the active device as a passive load modulation. Integrate NFC functionality in Smartphones requires small loop antennas, and thus, active load modulation is usually used.
US8813182 (Near field communication activation and authorization; PayPal) illustrates a method of activation and authorization of a NFC enabled device. The payment application activation may begin with the user entering login information, and then, forwards the information and a public key (unique identifier). In response to receiving the user's information and unique identifier, the service provider system sends packet information to the mobile device. The packet information from the payment provider system to the mobile device may include data relating to activation code and/or security keys. A corresponding code generated by the application is then communicated back to the payment provider system from the mobile device. In this regard, such a back-and-forth communication or “handshake” between the mobile device and the payment provider system allows for user and/or system verification, authorization, and compatibility check to complete the application activation process.

US8626066 (Near field communication device; NXP) illustrates a system to switch between passive mode and active mode. A control unit is adapted for switching the communication unit from the passive operating state to the active operating state upon receipt of a configuration signal received from the external device. The control unit is also adapted for controlling the communication unit to the active operating state by exposing the card emulation feature using only the card emulation parameters for RF initialization.

In case that the POS terminal does not have the NFC capability, the magnetic stripe transmission (MST) technique can be used as in Samsung Pay. Magnetic stripe payment cards carry a magnetic stripe that contains the payment card data. Magnetic stripe payment cards include credit, debit, gift, and coupon cards, among others. The data is "written" onto the magnetic stripe by alternating the orientation of the magnetic particles embedded into the stripe. Card data is read from the magnetic stripe at a POS by swiping the card through a magnetic stripe reader. The reader includes of a reader head and its associated decoding circuitry. When the card is swiped through the reader the magnetic stripe moves in front of the reader head. The moving magnetic stripe, which contains the alternating polarity magnetic domains, creates a fluctuating magnetic field within the narrow sensing aperture of the reader head. The reader head converts this fluctuating magnetic field into an equivalent electrical signal. The decoding circuitry amplifies and digitizes this electrical signal, recreating the same data stream that was originally written onto the magnetic stripe. The encoding of the magnetic stripe is described in the international standard ISO 7811 and 7813. As illustrated in US20150235204 (System and method for a baseband nearfield magnetic stripe data transmitter; Looppay), the magnetic stripe transmission (MST) technique enables the transmission of the magnetic stripe data at baseband.

The MST device includes a driver and an inductor, and the MST device is configured to receive the stream of pulses from the mobile phone, to amplify and shape the received stream of pulses and to generate and emit high energy magnetic pulses including the magnetic stripe data of the payment card. The inductor is driven by a series of timed current pulses that result in a series of high energy magnetic pulses that resemble the fluctuating magnetic field created by a moving magnetic stripe.


Step 2 The second step in the mobile payment transaction process is to send the credit/bank card information from the smartphone to the POS terminal. The payment button in the smartphone is programmed to be associated with a pre-selected payment card and activating of the payment button initiates the transfer of card information data of the pre-selected payment card.


The NFC mobile payment enable smartphone includes the secure element (SE) that is coupled to an NFC controller The SE is typically a tamper-resistant piece of hardware (e.g., an integrated circuit) with secure memory that enables the implementation of security-sensitive applications. The credit/bank card information is encrypted and stored in the SE. The embedded software (e.g., applet) inside the SE emulates credit/bank card. The NFC controller interfaces the SE and the NFC RF communication unit to encode/modulate and send the data that includes the credit/bank card information processed in the SE.

US8761664 (Near field connection establishment; Nokia) illustrates the operation of the NFC controller to interface the SE and the NFC RF communication unit. The NFC controller is configured to activate, via the switch, establishment of a NFC connection through the RF communication unit to the SE in response to the RF communication unit detecting an external radio frequency field for establishment of a NFC connection by an external device; and identify a NFC connection attempt addressed to a functionality of the hosting device instead of a NFC connection attempt addressed to a functionality of the SE from the external device.

US8706081 (Packet inspection in near field communication controller for secure element protection; Google) illustrates a method for packet inspection in a NFC controller for SE protection. The functionality of the SE can be implemented by the applets. An applet can refer to an application, program, or other type of software that is used to perform a particular task. Because the platform of a secure element is typically closed, users do not generally have privileges to install and/or update applets on their own. Instead, such tasks are handled by third-party service providers known as Trusted Service Managers (TSMs). Moreover, the applets provided to a SE are often subject to a certification requirement. For example, when a communication device is being used as an electronic wallet, a financial services or payment processing entity may need to approve any applet installation and/or update. As a result, when a security vulnerability is discovered in connection with an applet, the delivery of an approved applet update through the proper third-party service provider can take a significant amount of time. Until the code update is received and installed, the SE remains exposed to the security flaw. The NFC controller can have a memory containing executable instructions that cause the NFC controller to perform a method for handling data. The method performed by the NFC controller includes receiving one or more filtering rules corresponding to security (e.g., a security fix) for an applet in the SE, receiving a data packet for the SE, and determining whether to communicate the data packet to the SE based on the one or more filtering rules.

US8380977 (Peer-to-peer communication method for near field communication; Samsung) illustrates a peer-to-peer communication method for NFC to provide the required link-level security to an NFC terminal during peer-to-peer communication. A link-level security is started by exchanging a link-level security request and a link-level security response between an initiator terminal and a target terminal. Transmission data are encrypted at link-level security layers of the initiator terminal and the target terminal, and the encrypted data are exchanged between the initiator terminal and the target terminal. The link-level security is released by exchanging a link-level security release request and a link-level security release response between the initiator terminal and the target terminal.


Step 3 The final step in the mobile payment transaction process is to send the credit/bank card information and purchase information from the POS terminal to the acquirer, and then, to the issuer to authorize the payment transaction. An authorization code is sent to the acquirer if there is valid credit available. The acquirer authorizes the payment transaction, and then, the customer finalizes the payment through authorization/ authentication.


US8566239 (Mobile commerce systems and methods; First Data Corporation) illustrates a method for utilizing mobile electronic devices in various types of financial transactions. Merchants and service providers accept many forms of payment. Many merchants will accept cash, credit cards, debit cards, stored-value cards, checks, and promotional items such as coupons. All of these forms of payment are often carried by a consumer because some merchants and/or service providers may only accept some of the various possible forms of payment. Sometimes, a customer may not pre-plan a visit to a specific merchant and/or service provider. So, the consumer may wish to carry the different forms of payment in case the consumer does happen to make an unplanned visit. The method of providing a plurality of mobile commerce functions comprises receiving a communication related to a function of a mobile wallet application of a mobile device. Acquirer systems for handling of the communication can be identified based on the function of the mobile wallet application to which the communication relates. The communication can be routed to the identified acquirer systems for handling of the communication. In some cases, a reply to the communication can be received from the identified acquirer systems and the reply can be sent to a recipient.

US8090657 (Method and apparatus for authenticating financial transactions; Electronic Finger Print Technologies) illustrates a system for authentication of financial transactions using a mobile terminal includes apparatus for sampling a unique biological identifier of a system user. The user may complete a transaction by using a unique biological identifier in place of the credit card without requiring either the customer's signature or the entry of a PIN. The unique biological identifier is preferably a finger print.

©2015 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved http://www.techipm.com/

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

NFC Patents for Smartphone Mobile Payments 2Q 2015


NFC (Near field communication) is a short-range wireless technology that allows wireless connections between two devices for data exchange in various business transactions. NFC-enabled smartphones are one of major driver for current mobile payments market.

TechIPm researched patents for the NFC-equipped smartphones and systems/applications for the mobile payments, issued in the USPTO as of June 30, 2015. TechIPm’s research identified more than 600 patents that are related to the NFC-enabled smartphone mobile payments. The identified NFC patents are classified by devices, systems, applications and their sub-components/systems.

Among 89 IPR holders Sony (including Sony Ericsson) is the leader followed by Visa, NXP, Nokia, Broadcom and Samsung Electronics.

To evaluate the essentiality of a patent for the NFC smartphone mobile payments, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each identified NFC patent are compared to the industry standards for NFC technology (ISO and NFC Forum). The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation. Total of 164 patents are selected as the potential candidates of the NFC standard essential patents (SEPs).

Among 24 IPR holders, NXP is the leader followed by Sony, Broadcom, Round Rock, Samsung Electronics and Nokia.

For more information, please contact Alex Lee at alexglee@techipm.com .

©2015 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved

http://www.techipm.com/

Saturday, May 16, 2015

The U.S. Holds IPR Leadership in Patents for Wireless Standards


To evaluate the IPR leadership in wireless communications, the US patents that are related to the key wireless standards are analyzed.  The wireless patens are grouped by mobile wireless communications (4G LTE) related patents and fixed wireless communications (WLAN, WPAN, NFC) related patents.  Patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each patent are analyzed as to whether the contents are within the scope of key standard specifications (3GPP, IEEE, ISO, NFC Forum).  Top 20 patent holders for each group are then selected to rank the combined IPR shares.  For details about the analysis, please refer “Wireless Patents for Standards & Applications 1Q 2015” (http://www.slideshare.net/alexglee/wireless-patents-for-standards-applications-1q-2015).

For the mobile wireless communications IPR, LG Electronics is the leader followed by Samsung Electronics, Qualcomm, Google, Ericsson, Nokia, Apple, InterDigital, BlackBerry and Panasonic. For the fixed wireless communications IPR, Sony is the leader followed by Intel, Marvell, Samsung Electronics, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Cisco, NXP, Philips and Texas Instruments. Combining the mobile and fixed wireless communications IPR, Samsung Electronics is the leader followed by LG Electronics, Qualcomm, Intel, Sony, Nokia, Google, Ericsson, Marvell and InterDigital.

The combined IPR shares for the top 20 IPR holder’s countries based on the location of headquarter show that the U.S. holds IPR leadership in patents for the key wireless standards.

For more information, please contact Alex Lee at alexglee@techipm.com

©2015 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/




Thursday, March 26, 2015

4G LTE, 5G M2M/IoT, Smartphone NFC Patents for Standards & Applications Data 1Q 2015

TechIPm (http://www.techipm.com) has announced the addition of the "4G LTE Patents for Standards Data 1Q 2015," "M2M & D2D Patents for IoT Data 1Q 2015," and "NFC Patents for Standards & Applications Data 1Q 2015" to its offering.

TechIPm’s patents research data are very useful information for the patent licensing royalty & litigation damage estimation, patent investment feasibility analysis, competitive intelligence, R&D planning and strategic patent development.


4G LTE Patents for Standards Data 1Q 2015 is a custom research based on 4G LTE patents analysis for the market leaders among LTE UE (cellular phones, smart phones, PDAs, mobile PCs, etc.) and base station (eNB) product manufactures and innovators. To evaluate the essentiality of a patent for the LTE-Advanced standard, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each 4G LTE related patent are compared to the final versions of the 3GPP Release 10 technical specifications for the LTE RAN (Radio Access Network). Assignee name, patent number (USPTO & EPO Families hyperlinked to Google Patent), standard specifications series & section number, technology category, and essentiality level for more than 1600 issued patents are provided in the data.


M2M & D2D communication technologies are the key enablers for emerging IoT (Internet of Things) applications and considered as the essential components of 5G mobile communication. M2M & D2D Patents for IoT Data 1Q 2015 is a custom research based on patents analysis for the market leaders among M2M & D2D product manufactures and service providers. Patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each patent are analyzed as to whether the contents are within the scope of key technologies for M2M (e.g. low power design & management) and D2D (e.g. discovery process) communications.  Assignee name, patent/publication number, hyperlink to Google Patent technology category, title, abstract, and application date for more than 1300 patent applications are provided in the data.


NFC Patents for Standards & Applications Data 1Q 2015 is a custom research based on NFC related patents analysis for the market leaders among NFC product manufactures and service providers. NFC patents are classified by industry standard for NFC technology (ISO and NFC Forum) and major NFC applications. Assignee name, patent number (USPTO & EPO Families hyperlinked to Google Patent), applications, and standard specifications series & section number for more than 600 issued patents are provided in the data.

For more information visit


Contacts
Alex G. Lee, Principal
TechIPm, LLC
alexglee@techipm.com

Monday, March 2, 2015

NFC Patents for Standards & Applications 1Q 2015


NFC (Near field communication) is a short-range wireless technology that allows wireless connections between two devices for data exchange in various business transactions. NFC-enabled smartphones are one of major driver for current mobile communications market.

To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base has been performed. Total of 604 issued patents are identified as of March 1, 2015.

The identified NFC patents are classified by industry standard for NFC technology (ISO and NFC Forum) and major NFC applications. The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation. The major NFC applications included in the analysis are NFC device and system (e.g. security), mobile payments, mobile business applications, entertainment, and social networking applications.

Among 83 IPR holders Sony (including Sony Ericsson) is the leader followed by Visa, NXP, Nokia, Broadcom, Round Rock, MasterCard, Blaze Mobile, Microsoft, Samsung, and BlackBerry.

For more information, please contact Alex Lee at alexglee@techipm.com .

©2015 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved

http://www.techipm.com/

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

NFC Standard Essential Patent Candidates Data 4Q 2014


NFC (Near field communication) is the key technology for Smartphone wallet application: A Smartphone including an electronic wallet provides a variety of financial and payment capabilities. The Smartphone wallet application supports paying for products or services in much the same way as presenting a credit card, a debit card, a smart card, a transit card, or a toll tag for payment. The Smartphone wallet can communicate wirelessly with a point-of-sale (POS) terminal using NFC technology to provide the appropriate financial information to complete a payment transaction. There are many Android and Windows phones offer NFC applications. Recently, France Brevets sued HTC and LG for patent infringement using two Inside Secure’s NFC patents.

To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base and ISO/IEC standard essential patents (SEPs) data base have been performed. To evaluate the essentiality of a NFC patent, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each NFC patent are compared to industry standard for NFC technology (under development by the NFC Forum). The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), Connection Handover, and Tag Operation.

NFC Standard Essential Patent Candidates Data provides current assignee name, USPTO and EPO family issued patent number (with Hyper-link to Google patents), related standard specifications, title, and abstract.


©2014 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Internet of Things Standard Essential Patents Global IPR Governance 1Q 2014

TechIPm, LLC’s Internet of Things (IoT) standard essential patents research for the US and EU market of NFC, UHF RFID and Zigbee for wireless sensor networks identified total of 380 issued patents in the USPTO and EPO as the potential candidates for IoT standard essential patents as of January 31, 2014.

To evaluate the essentiality of a IoT patent, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each NFC patent is compared to the latest versions of NFC Forum’s standard specifications (Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), Connection Handover, and Tag Operation) and ISO/IEC 18092 – 2004; UHF RFID patent is compared to ISO/IEC 18000-C; and Zigbee patent is compared to IEEE 802.15.4-2006.

Among 84 IPR shareholders, NXP is the leader followed by ZIH (Zebra), Intermec, Symbol (Motorola Solutions), Broadcom (Innovision), Sony, Atmel, Round Rock and Samsung.

For more information, please contact Alex Lee at alexglee@techipm.com .

©2014 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Sunday, December 15, 2013

NFC Standard Essential Patent Candidates 4Q 2013

NFC (Near field communication) is the key technology for Smartphone wallet application: A Smartphone including an electronic wallet provides a variety of financial and payment capabilities. The Smartphone wallet application supports paying for products or services in much the same way as presenting a credit card, a debit card, a smart card, a transit card, or a toll tag for payment. The Smartphone wallet can communicate wirelessly with a point-of-sale (POS) terminal using NFC technology to provide the appropriate financial information to complete a payment transaction. There are many Android and Windows phones offer NFC applications. Recently, France Brevets sued HTC and LG for patent infringement using two Inside Secure’s NFC patents.

To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base and ISO/IEC standard essential patents (SEPs) data base have been performed. To evaluate the essentiality of a NFC patent, patent disclosures in claims and detail description for each NFC patent are compared to industry standard for NFC technology (under development by the NFC Forum). The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), Connection Handover, and Tag Operation.

TechIPm, LLC’s NFC standard essential patent research for the US market identified total of 83 issued patents as the potential candidates for NFC SEPs as of 4Q 2013. NXP is the leader in IPR share followed by Sony, Innovision Research & Technology, Nokia, STMicroelectronics, Inside Secure and Samsung.


©2013 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/


Saturday, July 14, 2012

Smartphone Wireless Standards Essential Patents Competitive Index 2Q 2012

Standards essential patent candidates for three key Smartphone wireless technologies are researched: LTE, NFC, and Zigbee. To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base has been performed.


As to LTE, patent disclosures in claim and detail description for each LTE patent are compared to the final versions of the 3GPP Release 8 technical specifications (Release 10 for carrier aggregation specifications). As to NFC, patent disclosures in claim and detail description for each NFC patent are compared to the NFC Forum standard specifications (Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation). As to Zigbee, patent disclosures in claim and detail description for each Zigbee patent are compared to the IEEE 802.15.4-2006 standard specifications.

To find the innovation leadership for Smartphone wireless technologies, a competitive index (C.I.) is devised by considering the IPR leadership in each key technology and IPR share (C.I. of 100 means the top for all three Smartphone wireless technologies): As of 2Q 2012, Samsung is the leader followed by Philips(+NXP), LG & Qualcomm, Nokia, Motorola(+Freescale), InterDigital, Sony, ETRI, and ZTE.

For details, please contact Alex Lee (alexglee@techipm.com).


©2012 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved

http://www.techipm.com/

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

NFC Standards Essential Patent Candidates 2Q 2012

NFC (Near field communication) is the key technology for Smartphone wallet application: A Smartphone including an electronic wallet provides a variety of financial and payment capabilities. The Smartphone wallet application supports paying for products or services in much the same way as presenting a credit card, a debit card, a smart card, a transit card, or a toll tag for payment. The Smartphone wallet can communicate wirelessly with a point-of-sale (POS) terminal using NFC technology to provide the appropriate financial information to complete a payment transaction.

To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base has been performed. Total of 863 patents (214 issued patents) are identified as of 2Q 2012.

The identified NFC patents are further classified by industry standard for NFC technology (under development by the NFC Forum). The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation.

Total of 126 patents (36 issued patents), which are related to the NFC Forum standard, are identified as of 2Q 2012: NXP is the leader followed by Sony, Innovision Research & Technology, Nokia, Samsung, STMicroelectronics, and Inside Secure.

For details, please contact Alex Lee (alexglee@techipm.com).


©2012 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

NFC Patent under Litigation

Recently, On Track Innovations filed a lawsuit against T-Mobile for its patent US6045043. On Track Innovations claimed that T-Mobile’s smartphone services base on HTC Amaze 4G and the Nokia Astound violate its NFC technology.

US6045043 claimed fundamental functions of NFC in combination with other functions. The issue in litigation will be the claim construction for the limitation “contact and contactless modes of operation,” especially the term “and.”

Title: Contact/contactless data transaction card

Summary:
Both "contact" and "contactless" devices are in the form of smart cards provided either with electrical contacts for effecting direct electrical contact with a card reader. When contactless data transmission is required, a coil antenna in the chip card is adapted to receive data from and transmit data to a reading device having a similar antenna. The invention relates to a data transaction device having an on-board processor for effecting both "contact" and "contactless" modes of data transfer, each conforming to different communications protocols. The invention provides a data transaction card wherein operating parameters associated with the communications protocols can be set by the manufacturer or user in accordance with customer requirements.

Claim:
1. A data transaction card having contact and contactless modes of operation, comprising:

a semiconductor device for operating in said contact and contactless modes in accordance with a respective contact or contactless data communications protocol,

a contact field including contacts fixedly connected to the semiconductor device during both said contact and contactless modes, and allowing data transmission between the contacts and the semiconductor device in accordance with said contact data communications protocol only during said contact mode,

an antenna coil for allowing contactless data transmission between the antenna coil and the semiconductor device, in accordance with said contactless data communications protocol, and

an antenna interface coupled to the antenna coil, to the semiconductor device and to at least some of the contacts in the contact field and being responsive to an electromagnetic field across the coil for effecting said contactless data transmission.


©2012 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

NFC Patents for Standards & Applications 4Q 2011


NFC (Near field communication) is a short-range wireless technology that allows wireless connections between two devices for data exchange in various business transactions. NFC-enabled smartphones are expected to be one of major driver for mobile communications market.

To find the key IPR holders for NFC patents, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base has been performed. Total of 729 patents (588 published patent applications) are identified as of Oct. 31, 2011. The Key IPR holders are American Express, Apple, AT&T, Bank of America, Broadcom, First Data, Innovision Research & Technology, IBM, Inside Contactless, LG, MasterCard, Microsoft, Motorola, NEC, Nokia, Sony (including Sony Ericsson), NTT DoCoMo, NXP, Oberthur Technologies, Qualcomm, Renesas Technology, RIM, Samsung, Sprint, and STMicroelectronics.

The identified NFC patents are classified by industry standard for NFC technology (under development by the NFC Forum) and major NFC applications. The NFC Forum standard specifications included in the analysis are Activity, Digital, Protocol, LLCP (Logical Link Control Protocol), NDEF (Data Exchange Format), RF/Analog, RTD (Record Type Definition), and Tag Operation. The major NFC applications included in the analysis are NFC device and system (e.g. security), mobile payments, mobile business applications, entertainment, and social networking applications.

RF/Analog is identified as the top specification, and mobile payments are identified as the top NFC application.

For details about the product, "NFC Patents Data for Standards and Applications", please contact Alex Lee (alexglee@techipm.com).


©2011 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Emerging Wireless Technologies Innovation Leader: 4G LTE, M2M, Cognitive Radio


As an indicator of innovation status for emerging wireless communications technologies, patents among US market leaders are researched. To find the key IPR holders, a keyword search of the USPTO patent data base has been performed as of Feb. 28, 2011.

Following emerging wireless technologies are included in the research:

1. LTE-Advanced:It is one of major technology for 4G (IMT-Advanced) under standardization by 3GPP release 10. The key technologies in standard specifications are carrier aggregation, HetNet, Relay, SON, and SU-MIMO.

2. Gigabit WLAN: It is 60 GHz unlicensed band wireless systems, which can carry Gbps of data, enable several new applications: high definition video streaming wireless in real time, high speed wireless gaming, and wireless docking and connection to displays. IEEE 802.11ad was formed in January 2009 to make industry standard for 60 GHz wireless systems as an amendment to the existing IEEE 802.11-2007 (modifications to the 802.11 PHY and the 802.11 MAC).

3. Gognitive radio in TVWS: The technologies for the cognitive radios over TV white space are under standardization by IEEE 802.22 and 802.11af.

4. Zigbee for M2M: ZigBee is a low-cost, low-power, wireless mesh networking standard based on the IEEE 802.15.4-2003 for Wireless Personal Area Networks. Zigbee is one of key enableing technologies for M2M (Machine-to-Machine) applications: smart grids. connected home, building automation, mobile helath, security, and automatic control.

5. NFC: Near field communication is a short-range wireless technology for mobile transaction applications. Industry standard for NFC technology is under development by the NFC Forum.

Among the total of 44 IPR holders, Samsung Electronics is the leader followed by Broadcom, Motorola, Qualcomm, Philips, Nokia, LG Electronics, Intel, STMicroelectonics, and Microsoft.


©2011 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Global NFC Patent Portfolios Analysis

Using the Innography, which is a business intelligent solution for IP management (http://www.innography.com/), the patent portfolios for NFC technologies are analyzed. To find the key IPR (issued patents and published applications) holders and their patent portfolios, semantic method is used for the keyword searching of the global patent data bases (USPTO, EPO, JIPO, KIPO, CIPO, WPO etc.)

As of Oct. 20 2009, the key IPR holders and their IPR shares for NFC are as follows:

Sony (229), Nokia (130), MS (76), Philips (67), Broadcom (65), Samsung (58), Motorola (57), NXP (43), First Data Co (22), Qualcomm (22), IBM (19), Vodafon (18), and Inside Contactless (17).

Using the identified key IPR holders' patents, patent portfolios are compared with respect to portfolio quality measures (citations, number of patents, and technology coverage) and portfolio utilization measures (revenue, global families, and litigation information).

As for the NFC, Sony, Nokia, and IBM form a leader group in portfolio management capability.

*For the 2015 update, please visit

NFC Patents for Smartphone Mobile Payments 2Q 2015

http://techipm-innovationfrontline.blogspot.com/2015/07/nfc-patents-for-smartphone-mobile.html


©2009 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Thursday, July 9, 2009

RFID IPR: Patent Information Pool for RFID



"RFID IPR" is a blog site for patent information pool for RFID and related AutoID (Biometrics, NFC etc.) IPR: http://techipm-rfidipr.blogspot.com/


Each patent is linked to Google patent search for easy view and download. The site also provides information about RFID related standard, patent landscape, patent pool, and essential patent analysis.



©2009 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved
http://www.techipm.com/

Sunday, May 3, 2009

NFC (Near Filed Communications) Innovation Frontline 2009 1Q



As of Feb. 1, 2009, US issued patents and published patent applications

analysis for NFC shows that Sony Ericsson, Sony, Nokia, and Motorola are

the leaders in technology innovatations for US markets.

For the current status of NFC market and standardization information,

please refer the NFC Forum website: http://www.nfc-forum.org/


©2009 TechIPm, LLC All Rights Reserved