Is anything in the patent world ever really free?
That question anchors a new Clause 8 conversation between host Eli Mazour and Professor Kristen Osenga, a University of Richmond law professor and one of the leading academic voices on standard essential patents.
At the center of the discussion is the rise of so-called “royalty-free” technology standards. Osenga’s point is straightforward: “free” often comes with strings attached — particularly for smaller innovators that may be required to cross-license valuable patent rights or accept terms they may later regret.
Her main example is the Alliance for Open Media, the tech consortium behind a “royalty-free” video compression standard. The pitch sounds simple: use the standard without paying royalties. But, as Osenga explains, the real question is what companies may be giving up in return — and whether they fully understand the long-term cost of joining.
She offers a simple analogy: a store gives away free croissants to get customers in the door. Customers build habits around it. Then one day the sign changes. In Osenga’s view, the same risk exists here. Companies can build products and business models around terms that may not remain as favorable as they first appeared.
From there, the discussion broadens into the wider ecosystem of royalty-free standards, cross-licensing organizations, defensive patent pledges, and emerging AI-related IP initiatives. What is driving these arrangements? Collaboration? Public relations? Strategic control? And what, exactly, should companies think through before signing on?
As Osenga puts it: “Follow the money … where are these groups making their money? Because it’s probably coming from some other part of their business model.”
The episode also covers:
what the pattern of withdrawals from major cross-licensing organizations reveals about how these arrangements play out over time
SEP policy whiplash across US administrations, the Standard Essential Royalties Act (SERA), and where things stand now
the EU’s proposed SEP framework, and why it stalled
the litigation funding debate, including why Osenga founded The Inventors Defense Alliance
the Tillis-Schiff letter to ANSI, China’s push to shape global standards bodies, and the implications for US innovation leadership
why Osenga believes the RESTORE Act is critical to preserving US innovation leadership
It is a conversation worth sharing with anyone focused on licensing, standards, or innovation policy.
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📌 Presented by Tradespace – where ideas take flight.








