You might have missed this, but over the last few days Ebay
found a buyer for most of Skype. The
Skype story has many threads that resonate with issues such as the success of
peer-to-peer data networks, the affect of true price competition on the incumbent
telecommunications companies and what happens when a company buys a business
that is outside of its core competency. Skype
has been important bell weather in all of these ways, but the part that has
struck me the most is how it shows the importance of knowing where the core
intellectual property rights are before you buy or invest in the business.
Today’s NY Times has an article about the Skype acquisition
that addresses this issue really well. For those of you who don’t want to read
the article, the salient point is that when Ebay purchased Skype it did not
acquire the absolute ownership of some aspects of the core intellectual
property rights for the business. These
rights remained with the founders, who then licensed the technology to
Ebay. This worked fine for a while,
until the founders left the company.
And, then, things got contentious.
Ebay couldn’t benefit from the business purchase they thought that they
had made, and ultimately had to sell the business.
What interests me here is that the Skype story demonstrates
an important point about the relationship between intellectual property rights
and a business. There is a tendency for
people to assume that intellectual property invented by an employee or founder automatically
is the property of the company. In fact,
that is often not the case. Invention, the
creation of intellectual property, is as a matter of law done by individuals
not corporations. Therefore, the individual
inventors are the owners of the intellectual property, not the entities that
they own or the entities that they work for.
This separation of invention and corporate ownership results
in some very difficult moments for the unprepared. Most of the time, I’ve seen it in the context
of a venture investment, where the investor wants to invest in an entity that
owns all of the required intellectual property to pursue the business. I have also seen a few times where a business
sale was thwarted because intellectual property rights were not clearly held by
the business. The Skype example is much
larger in dollar numbers, but holds the same lesson.
Where an entity is intended to be the vehicle of wealth
creation – i.e., the inventor does not merely plan to license his intellectual property
to another – the vehicle must have all
of the inventor’s intellectual property rights.
Failure for this to occur creates leverage for the inventor down stream,
either in the ability to block a transaction, or the ability to get compensated
directly. As I am sure you can imagine
the people who invest in entities tend to look pretty dimly at inventors
retaining individual economic rights.
This plays out in customary practice in a number of
ways. Businesses put in place various
legal agreements to force their employees and consultants to automatically
transfer their intellectual property rights to the business. These “Proprietary Rights and Invention
Assignment Agreements” are the staple of every venture capital deal, and in my
experience in place with every well-run technology business, whether it is venture backed or not. Similarly, businesses put in place
confidentiality agreements to protect their trade secrets (including secrets “invented”
by the individual employee). Sometimes
applicable state laws will impose a transfer of rights even if a business
neglects to put in place written agreements.
From the inventor’s perspective, this might seem unfair –
why should an employer get an irrevocable blanket right to intellectual
property developed by the inventor or consulting client? However, as a matter of commercial practice, I think it is both reasonable and fair for an business that is providing employment or
other economic benefit to receive the intellectual property it paid to develop. But, whether it’s fair or not, it’s customary
commercial practice and inventors should not be surprised by this.
Where inventors can make some headway is to limit the scope
of the intellectual property rights automatically transferred. The most
customary exceptions are for intellectual property clearly invented outside of
the employment relationship, or for intellectual property that existed prior to
the individual becoming part of the employer’s business. These limitations are particularly important
where an inventor is working as a consultant, or has had a long career as an
inventor.
The expectation of any inventor founder of an emerging
company should be that the investors will require automatic transfer of all intellectual
property. This is the general rule,
because the investor will not want to have the ultimate value of its investment
subject to down stream actions by the inventor.
That Ebay apparently broke this customary practice when it purchased
Skype suggests that either (i) it ignored this basic rule or (ii) the Skype
founders had sufficient negotiating leverage to overcome a standard condition
to a transaction. Whatever the reason,
the failure to unify ownership of the business and ownership of core
intellectual property rights appears to have cost Ebay money and time. Depending upon how you look at it, the
Ebay/Skype story is either a cautionary tale for investors and acquirers or a
story that shows how founders can retain control over their business ideas. But, with the amount of capital involved and
its publicity, you can assume that anyone investing in technology in the near
term will be even more focused on capturing intellectual property rights, particularly
from founders.