At Wed, 29 Jan 2014 18:26:03 +0700, Robert Elz wrote:
Much easier, for such nefarious company, is simply to hire (as employees, or
consultants, it makes no difference) people to "represent" the company's
interest at the IETF, and make sure that those people are unaware of any
and all IPR claims that the company may possess.
And doing this could even be a violation of our rules (for the IPR
holder at least), depending on the details.
RFC 3668 says:
l. "Reasonably and personally known": means something an individual
knows personally or, because of the job the individual holds,
would reasonably be expected to know. This wording is used to
indicate that an organization cannot purposely keep an individual
in the dark about patents or patent applications just to avoid the
disclosure requirement. But this requirement should not be
interpreted as requiring the IETF Contributor or participant (or
his or her represented organization, if any) to perform a patent
search to find applicable IPR.
Thomas