Computerworld - Thirty-two years ago, IEEE participants hammered out one of the most successful standards ever developed. Ethernet succeeded in part because the big players involved at the time, including Xerox, Intel and Digital Equipment, donated intellectual property (IP) to the specification. Those vendors weren't motivated by altruism but by enlightened self-interest: Each realized that a common standard would expand the market and provide more opportunities to sell Ethernet-based products.
Today, many vendors view the process that created Ethernet as a quaint relic of the past. The rules have changed, middlemen have been added, and it's users who will pay the price.
Now, rather than being content to recoup IP development costs indirectly by selling products based on new standards, vendors increasingly expect to be paid for the IP that they contribute. And a class of companies has emerged that doesn't produce products at all. Their business model is to develop IP, patent it and license it to others who then build the IT products and services you buy. The IP vendors participate vigorously in the standards process in order to ensure that the final specification includes IP covered by their patents. In this way, any manufacturer that builds a product based on that standard will need to buy a license from the vendors.
Standards organizations have had to relax the rules to accommodate pressure from vendors. At the IEEE, dealing with IP issues is now its biggest challenge. The World Wide Web Consortium, which insists on a royalty-free IP policy, has seen standards initiatives move to more flexible consortia, such as OASIS.
The concept of the royalty-free specification is being supplanted by "reasonable and nondiscriminatory" licensing terms, also known as RAND. In some cases, there are so many IP owners to pay off that building a product to conform with a standard has become onerous. To facilitate that process, a layer of infrastructure has emerged: the licensing agency, whose sole purpose is to act as a consolidator -- a bill-payment service for the IP owners behind a given standard.
The most obvious example of this development has taken place in the digital rights management (DRM) arena. Here, the specification for the ISO standard MPEG REL, a rights expression language used in DRM implementations, is derived from IP owned by ContentGuard, a spin-off from Xerox. (MPEG REL is based on ContentGuard's XrML rights expression language.) What's unusual in this case is that the IP reflected in the standard is wholly owned by a single vendor, says Trent Henry, an analyst at Burton


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Driving Secure Enterprise File Sharing and Syncing in the Enterprise
- GroupLogic's new activEcho is the industry's only secure Enterprise File Sharing and Synching solution that balances the need for simplicity for the end...
- The Enterprise File Sharing Option
- Enterprises and IT departments need to address several critical security issues when considering file sharing and syncing products. Many of today's solutions do...
- Security Strategies to Virtualizing Internet-Facing Applications
- The IT organization at Intel has set a goal to transition their enterprise to a private cloud for their Office and Enterprise applications....
- Cloud Security Planning Guide
- Cloud security considerations span protecting hardware and platform technologies in the data center to enabling regulatory compliance and defending cloud access through different...
- Cloud Security Vendor Round Table
- This vendor round table guide will help you to evaluate different cloud technology vendors and service providers based on a series of questions... All Security White Papers
- Live Webcast
Data Privacy and Protection in Production Environments: New Research from Ponemon Institute - Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT / 10:00 AM PDT
In a recent study conducted by Ponemon Institute, fifty-five percent of respondents... - Data Privacy and Protection in Production Environments: New Research from Ponemon Institute
- Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT / 10:00 AM PDT
In a recent study conducted by Ponemon Institute, fifty-five percent of respondents... - Security Certifications 101 - BlackBerry and all those acronyms what do they mean and why they matter?
- FIPS, Common Criteria, CAPS, AISEP, NFC, NIST, Fraunhofer SIT, CESG, DSD - these are just some of the government and industry certifications which...
- BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 Security Overview
- The presentation provides an overview of BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 security capabilities and features, including: BlackBerry® Balance™ technology, BlackBerry® Bridge, data-at-rest protection, and...
- BlackBerry NFC Security Overview
- The presentation on NFC security will provide an overview of the security protections built into the BlackBerry platform to protect users, application developers...
- Playing Defense: Staying on Top of Your Disaster Recovery Game
- When it comes to disaster recovery, rapidly growing data volumes, distributed computing models, and new technologies all combine to present an ever-changing playing... All Security Webcasts