Update: FTC asks Supreme Court to review Rambus antitrust case
FTC claims memory maker used anticompetitive practices
November 24, 2008 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service - WASHINGTON -- The Federal Trade Commission has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene in a case in which the agency accused memory-maker Rambus Inc. of anticompetitive behavior in deceiving a standards-setting body.
In April, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit threw out the FTC's case against Rambus, in which the agency accused the company of persuading industry groups to declare a standard for the memory used in PCs, servers, printers and cameras while failing to disclose that it owned the patents to those technologies. The FTC today asked the Supreme Court to overturn that appellate decision.
"We are not surprised by the FTC's filing and we are hopeful that the Supreme Court will confirm the decision of the CADC," said Tom Lavelle, senior vice president and general counsel at Rambus, in a statement. "We will file our response in the near future, and I note that the rulings of the FTC's administrative law judge, the CADC and a federal court jury in March of this year confirm that our position is the correct one."
The FTC brought antitrust charges against Rambus in 2002. After a trial, the full commission reversed a decision by Chief Administrative Law Judge Stephen McGuire, who ruled for Rambus in early 2004.
In mid-2006, the FTC charged Rambus with engaging in an illegal monopoly, saying the company failed to disclose its patents on technology related to dynamic RAM memory chips while working with the Joint Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC) standards-setting organization to create royalty-free or low-royalty standards for DRAM technology.
In early 2007, the FTC required Rambus to license its DRAM chips to other vendors, and it capped the royalty fees Rambus could charge.
Rambus appealed the case and won in the appeals court.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
FTC
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