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- Title
(UN)REASONABLE ROYALTIES.
- Authors
RISCH, MICHAEL
- Abstract
Though reasonable royalty damages are ubiquitous in patent litigation, they are only a hundred years old. But in that time they have become deeply misunderstood. This Article returns to the development and origins of reasonable royalties, exploring both why and how courts originally assessed them. It then turns a harsh eye toward all that we think we know about reasonable royalties. No current belief is safe from criticism, from easy targets such as the twenty-five percent "rule of thumb" to fundamental dogma such as the hypothetical negotiation. In short, this Article concludes that we are doing it wrong, and have been for some time. This Article is agnostic as to outcome; departure from traditional methods can and has led to both overcompensation and undercompensation. But it challenges those who support departure from historic norms--all while citing cases from the same period--to justify new rules, many of which fail any economic justification.
- Subjects
UNITED States; ROYALTIES (Patents); PATENT law; NONPRACTICING entities (Patent law); PATENT infringement; PANDUIT Corp.; ACTIONS &; defenses (Law)
- Publication
Boston University Law Review, 2018, Vol 98, Issue 1, p187
- ISSN
0006-8047
- Publication type
Article