Facebook is paying
Microsoft $550m (£341m) for some of the patents it recently bought from AOL. Microsoft paid more than $1bn for most of
AOL's patents, beating rivals reported to have included Facebook. Facebook was
sued by Yahoo for patent infringement earlier this year. The social networking
site, which is preparing for a stock market listing, also reported a drop in
its first quarter profits to $205m from $233m a year earlier. A Facebook lawyer
described the deal as: "Another significant step in our ongoing process of
building an intellectual property portfolio to protect Facebook's
interests." Microsoft bought 925 patents and patent applications from AOL.
It is now selling 650 of those patents to Facebook as well as licences to the
other 275. "Today's agreement with Facebook enables us to recoup over half
of our costs while achieving our goals from the AOL auction," said
Microsoft's general counsel Brad Smith. There has been a series of recent
patent deals between technology companies as they try to defend themselves in
lawsuits. If a company successfully sues another it can demand a sales ban of
its competitor's products, or force the loser to pay expensive licence fees. Since
the start of the year, Intel, Google and Facebook are among those to have
bought significant numbers of patents from other technology companies. Facebook
bought a number of patents from IBM last month.
Instagram deal
Also on Monday,
Facebook reported results for the first three months of the year. The company,
which is expected to list on the stock market in the coming months, reported a
drop in its net income between January and March to $205m from $233m in the
same period last year. Revenues for the quarter came in at $1.06bn, down 6%
from the final three months of 2011. Facebook said that its advertising
business usually slows down in the first quarter but that the growth of the
business in previous years had masked that trend. Facebook also revealed that
it has agreed to pay $200m to Instagram if its recent $1bn deal to buy the
photo-sharing firm were to fall through.
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