Over recent years a number of new business models for making money out
of IP have emerged and along with them have come the IP intermediaries.
They may not be universally loved, but they show no signs of going away.
In fact, we can expect to see many more evolve
Intellectual Asset Management February/March 2008 53
Feature
By Raymond Millien and Ron Laurie
Patent licensing and enforcement
companies (PLECs)
These are entities that own one or more
patent portfolio, attempt to license them
through targeted letter-writing campaigns and
then file patent infringement suits against
those letter recipients who refuse to enter
into non-exclusive licences. Those that
practise this business model are often called
(rightly or wrongly) patent trolls.
In some cases, the PLECs have
purchased the patents they are asserting
and, in other cases, the PLEC entity is
actually founded by the inventor(s) of the
asserted patent portfolio (although in the
latter case, such entities are not technically
intermediaries). PLECs therefore generate
revenue both from licence fees and from the
annual US$3.4 billion IP awards and
settlements market.
Prime examples of PLECs include Acacia
Research, Fergason Patent Properties,
Lemelson Foundation, LPL Financial, NTP,
Patriot Scientific, RAKL, TLC and TPL Group
http://www.ipcapitalgroup.com/thoughtleadership/IAM-Meet_the_Middlemen.pdf