"The big blow came last month when a consortium including Apple, Microsoft and Research in Motion acquired for $4.5 billion about 6,000 Nortel patents, many of them said to be fundamental wireless patents. Google quickly bought 1,000 patents from IBM, but it clearly thought the move was not enough.
With the Nortel patents, competitors could levy patent licensing fees of as much as $15 per Android handset, Drummond said in his blog. Press reports suggested Microsoft stood to make more on the sale of Android handsets than on its one Windows Mobile 7 software.
Google is paying an estimated 63 percent premium for Motorola, making it the biggest proposed acquisition of it history to date. Google even agreed to pay a whopping $2.5 billion fee if it walks away from the deal, according to the New York Times.
The all-cash deal uses about a quarter of Google's cash reserves. "
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