First, FRAND does explicitly require that Qualcomm license their SEPs to all willing licensees under non-discriminatory terms, not just their customers or end-device makers.
Second, this isn't about earning higher profit. but whether Qualcomm is abusing the standard essential patents to prevent competition and maintain their dominance. Qualcomm doesn't want to compete with anyone on quality or price. ETSI which governs the wireless standard forbids such anti-competitive licensing practices outlawed by local powers.
Sure, SEP/FRAND isn't about promoting competition or best price, etc, but it is certainly about interoperability and everyone having fair and reasonable access to the underlying IP's to achieve the ideal.
afaik, non-desciminatory just means that they can't say we are charging Samsung more because we don't like them, but they can say that the fee for a specific use is X. And they could change the fee based on volume, clients ability to pay, etc.
Given how vague it is, I think the way to determine what's fair is to look at the effect on the market. I think their socket share is 60-70% which is the lions share, but not at the point to be considered a monopoly. They can't double thier rates without loosing market share.
In my view Qualcomms market share is largely due to how efficiently they have integrated all the wireless technologies into one package. If intel had a single efficient multi band package for LTE/3G/2g/wifi/bt etc... the extra 2% licensing costs would be offset by the battery savings.
There is nothing vague about ETS's bylaws requiring all licensors to comply with local anti-trust/monopoly laws. Many SSO's, bar IEEE's recent licensing policy on "smallest saleable Compliant Implementation," intentionally leave it out in their by-laws or FRAND commitment to avoid crossing paths with regulators. This isn't about their market share, but whether their licensing practices were anti-competitive and/or in violation of local laws and Qualcomm has been found guilty on that by at least three different regulators. I don't have any problem with a "natural monopoly" -- though the US regulator may not agree with me -- but this isn't clearly a problem of just market competition.
Second, this isn't about earning higher profit. but whether Qualcomm is abusing the standard essential patents to prevent competition and maintain their dominance. Qualcomm doesn't want to compete with anyone on quality or price. ETSI which governs the wireless standard forbids such anti-competitive licensing practices outlawed by local powers.
Sure, SEP/FRAND isn't about promoting competition or best price, etc, but it is certainly about interoperability and everyone having fair and reasonable access to the underlying IP's to achieve the ideal.