aaronspink said:
As I said earlier, the Rambus/DRAM maker cases are simple good guy/bad guy stories. Much more shades of gray. With a lot of psuedo legal issues on both sides (there is somewhat credible evidence of collution between the DRAM makers to harm Rambus, both before, during, and after they were part of Jedec).
Aaron Spink
speaking for myself inc.
The story from Rambus' position simply makes no sense. Working within jdec is entirely voluntary, and the jdec group itself exists for the sole purpose of formulating standards all members can use, free of charge--with none of the members obtaining proprietary patents from the emerging standards. Hence, Rambus could never at any time have shared anything with jdec members without knowing that whatever it shared would wind up commonly implemented in those standards at some point. Thus, Rambus has no credible position, imo. If Rambus did not want its technology shared, it had no business ever joining jdec in the first place, QED.
The problem was that jdec agreements are good-faith agreements between the members--not legal contracts--a point which did not escape Rambus lawyers, obviously--who manipulated the Rambus jdec involvment to create a fall-back position for the company in case their Rdram initiative failed (as it did.) Rambus was determined that memory makers were going to pay it for either Rdram or DDR sdram, come hell or high water, since as an IP company and not a manufacturer, Rambus could survive by no other means.
Characterizing events as "good-guy/bad-guy" does not in any way mean that there are no such actual elements involved. Clearly, there is a distinct contradiction between Rambus role as an IP company and its involvement with jdec in the first place, as "being invited" to join jdec does not equate to being compelled in some fashion to join the group against your will or interests. IIRC, too, once the other jdec members discovered Rambus had been lying about its patent applications from the first day, Rambus was then forcefully "uninvited" by jdec, and was booted out.
Unless Rambus intended to provide technology to jdec for the purpose of sharing that technology freely within jdec, the only purpose for Rambus' involvement in the group would have been to discern where the group was heading in order to beef up its pending patent applications more precisely so as to strengthen its ability to impose licensing fees down the line (or to steer the group towards approaches it was already in the process of patenting--without informing any of jdec's members about those patents), should its efforts with the Intel-backed Rdram scheme fail. The only flaw I see that jdec made was to admit Rambus in the first place--as it is a group that should be constrained only to ram manufacturers--and never to IP companies, imo. Hopefully, this was an error of judgment the ram manufacturers will never commit again--at least without a bevy of legally binding paperwork up front with respect to any patents an IP company may have applied for prior to jdec membership. Lawyers are fantastic revisionists, it should never be forgotten, and often a lawyer-sanitized tale bears no resemblance to the facts as they actually occurred.