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Nortel patents to shape tech for a decade to come

A man walks past a company sign at a Nortel Networks office tower in Toronto on Feb. 25, 2009. (Nathan Denette / THE CANADIAN PRESS)
A man walks past a company sign at a Nortel Networks office tower in Toronto on Feb. 25, 2009. (Nathan Denette / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Monday Jul. 4, 2011 3:33 PM ET

OTTAWA — The treasure trove of Nortel wireless technology patents that a consortium including Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM) has acquired will help shape your next smartphone and the network it will run on for the next decade.

Duncan Stewart, director of research at Deloitte, said as smartphones grow ever more popular, the patents behind the technology in them will grow ever more important.

And Waterloo, Ont.-based RIM's participation in the consortium will give it access to key technology.

"It is probably one of the two or three areas that patents are being used more and more often as ways of gaining a competitive advantage," he said.

"These are crucial things that are going to be at the core of networks almost certainly for at least the next decade."

Stewart said Nortel was ahead of the game in wireless technology with patents for advanced networks that are only now just coming to market.

"Those networks weren't being built in 2005 and 2006 -- if they had been, Nortel's financials probably would have done better," he said.

The consortium, which includes RIM, Apple, EMC, Ericsson, Microsoft and Sony, won the auction Friday with a bid of US$4.5 billion. RIM's share was $770 million.

The group beat out Google (Nasdaq:GOOG), which had been the stalking horse bidder in the auction. Google, a leader in Internet search, has been gaining market share in the wireless market with its Android operating system for smartphones and tablet computers.

Stewart said some have suggested that the consortium bought the patents to block Google from owning the portfolio, but he suggested if Google really wanted the patents, they could have bid more.

Much is still unknown about how the consortium will handle the ownership structure of the patents, so just who will own what in the portfolio of the more than 6,000 patents and patent applications including Internet search, social networking and nearly every aspect of modern telecommunications is unclear.

Stewart noted that ownership could be divided among the consortium members in several different ways, but speculated each member may be allowed to use all of the patents.

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