Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Keith Bergelt

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Nationality
  
United States

Titles
  
Chief Executive

Role
  
Executive

Name
  
Keith Bergelt

Employer
  
Open Invention Network


Keith Bergelt httpswwwopeninventionnetworkcomwpcontentup

Born
  
September 11, 1958 (age 65) (
1958-09-11
)
New York, NY

Alma mater
  
Duke University, AB 1979 Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law, JD 1982 Theseus Institute – International Management Institute, MBA 1995

Website
  
Management at openinventionnetwork.com

Education
  
Dedman School of Law, Duke University

Keith bergelt open inventions network


Keith Daniel Bergelt (born September 11, 1958) is an American corporate executive and former U.S. Diplomat. A pioneer in intellectual property consulting and finance, he is now CEO of Open Invention Network where he is responsible for coordinating the establishment and maintenance of a patent ‘‘no-fly” zone around Linux. As such, he is responsible for safeguarding an open and competitive landscape in key technology markets such as back-office transaction processing, mission critical IT applications, mobile communications/smartphones, and desktop computing.

Contents

Mr keith bergelt plenary session iv at gipc 2015 mumbai india


Early life

Bergelt was born in New York City and was raised in the village of Bayville, New York on the North Shore of Long Island. He attended St. Boniface Martyr School in Sea Cliff, New York and is a graduate of Locust Valley High School. He was a high school classmate of Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland.

Education

Bergelt holds degrees from Duke University’s Trinity College (AB), the Dedman School of Law at Southern Methodist University (JD), and Edhec Business School (Theseus MBA). In addition, he has studied management at INSEAD and Institut National des Telecommunications (INT) in France and economics and technology policy at University of San Francisco’s McLaren Graduate School of Business.

1982-2000

Upon graduation from law school, he entered public service and held diplomatic postings at the UN in New York City and the American Embassy in Tokyo, Japan. During his 12-year public service career he also lived in San Francisco, California and Washington, D.C. He was a colleague and tennis partner of U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner during their time together at the American Embassy in Tokyo in the early 1990s.

After the Berlin Wall fell in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union, Bergelt left government service and embarked on a private sector career in C-level strategy consulting focused on innovation at SRI Consulting in Menlo Park, CA. While at SRI Consulting he co-founded the first strategy consulting practice in the area of intellectual asset management at a major strategy consulting firm. This practice enabled companies to develop strategies to more effectively build, manage and leverage the value of their codified (patents, trademarks, copyrights) and non-codified (knowledge, know-how, etc.) intellectual capital through licensing, joint ventures, donation, abandonment and the creation of spin-outs, spin-ups and spin-ins uniquely suited to monetize corporate intangible assets.

2000-present

Bergelt was then brought into Motorola Corporation in Schaumburg, IL to establish and serve as General Manager of its Strategic Intellectual Asset Management business unit focused on distilling value from Motorola’s intellectual property. In addition, he served as Director of Technology Strategy during his tenure at Motorola.

Following his experience at Motorola and coincident with the departure of Bob Galvin from the Motorola Board of Directors, he was recruited by Kelso & Company, the New York-based private equity firm, to manage IP strategy, business development and licensing for its highly innovative IP-based portfolio company – Cambridge Display Technology (CDT) – in Cambridge, England.

After establishing the strategy and licensing program at CDT for Kelso, Bergelt was then engaged by Texas Pacific Group (TPG) as a full-time advisor to its Technology Investment Group, until he was recruited by Principal Financial Group to establish and run the first of its kind IP Fund and financial services advisory firm, focused on transforming IP into a viable source of collateral and a fourth lending vertical to complement asset based lending backed by property/plant/equipment, accounts receivable and inventory.

During his tenure as the CEO of Paradox Capital, Bergelt worked with a group of seasoned professionals from banking and IP law to raise over $350MM in capital that enabled Paradox to pioneer the emergence of IP as a viable asset class in asset based lending and, in so doing, obviate the necessity for second lien lending into IP-rich companies.

Bergelt was then recruited by IBM, Red Hat, Sony, NEC, Philips and Novell to serve as the CEO of Open Invention Network, a pro-competitive defensive patent management organization established to enable freedom to operate in Linux and to support the democratization of innovation occasioned by open source projects such as Linux.

'Bergelt has been the chief executive officer of Open Invention Network since 2008. He is responsible for defending the integrity of the Linux ecosystem. Bergelt has criticized Microsoft several times, for example when the company attempted to sell 22 Linux-related patents to patent trolls.

The message that Microsoft has been putting out over the last year to 18 months, thanks to their presence in open source forums and Sam Ramji, is that a lot of that effort is not more than rhetoric, and that their behaviors are the same. The inclusion of patents and the targeting of Linux, whether it's by design or not, is provocative. And it's unfortunate, because any of the work they were doing to develop a better manner of comportment and integration within the community will be for naught. It also solidifies the resolve of the community to support Linux users and the rights of them to use Lx. Irrespective of whether TomTom has other [patent] issues, this is a separate action. This action, by dragging in those Linux-targeting patents, is just more of Microsoft being Microsoft, and underscores how far they still have to go to be accepted by the open source community.

Allied Security Trust bought them and sold them to OIN. He has also been interviewed by Linux.com at the 2008 LinuxWorld Expo.

References

Keith Bergelt Wikipedia