InterDigital secures 11-country EU injunction against Disney in patent dispute
InterDigital secured an injunction against Disney from the Unified Patent Court, alleging infringement of an HEVC video encoding patent across 11 EU countries. This ruling confirms the patent's validity and could significantly impact Disney's streaming operations that rely on video compression technologies. Disney has the option to appeal the decision.
Key Takeaways
- Injunction covers an HEVC-related patent across 11 EU countries including Germany.
- The Unified Patent Court (UPC) ruling confirmed the validity of InterDigital’s video encoding patent.
- Disney retains the right to appeal the decision following multiple losses in Munich and Brazil.
- InterDigital recently reached a milestone settlement with Amazon covering Prime Video and FireTV devices.
Why It Matters
The ruling significantly raises the stakes for Disney’s European technical operations, as any disruption to HEVC encoding could impact 4K and HDR delivery for Disney+. By leveraging the pan-European jurisdiction of the Unified Patent Court, InterDigital has successfully moved beyond localized German disputes to a broader enforcement strategy that pressures Disney toward a comprehensive licensing deal. This victory reaffirms that even established industry giants must account for the patent costs associated with foundational compression technologies like HEVC and AVC. Watch for Disney's appeal filings or a potential pivot to a global arbitration model similar to the one recently adopted by Amazon.
Additional Context
The Unified Patent Court ruling represents a critical escalation in InterDigital's broad enforcement campaign against major streaming providers. Per IP Fray (April 2026), the Mannheim court had previously hinted that Disney’s technical defenses were insufficient, and that even a FRAND entitlement might not prevent an injunction. This trend is not confined to Disney; InterDigital and Amazon recently de-escalated a similar multi-year dispute. Per Seeking Alpha and JUVE Patent (June 2026), Amazon and InterDigital signed a patent license agreement covering Amazon Prime Video and FireTV devices, resolving litigation in the UK, Germany, Brazil, and the U.S. that was estimated to involve royalty claims exceeding $200 million annually. The broader licensing landscape is also adjusting to new pricing models for advanced compression. Per Access Advance (July 2025), HEVC royalty rates were scheduled to align with next-generation VVC Advance pricing starting January 1, 2026, aimed at providing market stability as 4K and 8K formats gain broader adoption. Access Advance currently estimates its pool covers 75-80% of the global HEVC patent landscape. Streaming publishers increasingly face a binary choice: pay these normalization-stage royalties or face court-ordered service disruptions in key markets. Legal pressure is also mounting from other patent holders and regulatory bodies. Per IP Fray (February 2026), Broadcom and Nokia have been active in seeking injunctions across German courts, with a Munich court recently ordering Netflix to halt HEVC-encoded streams. For Disney, these legal hurdles in the EU contrast with separate domestic challenges, such as the $2.5 billion FTC settlement over Amazon Prime enrollment tactics (per PCMag, June 2026), which highlights the dual regulatory and intellectual property risks currently facing the world's largest streaming platforms.
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