What are the principles of judicial regulation of standard essential patents?

Standard essential patent is mandatory in standard, locked in technology and inevitable in implementation. In order to prevent the right holders of standard essential patents from taking improper advantage of the above advantages, standard-setting organizations generally require the right holders of standard essential patents to make a commitment of FRAND (Fair, Reasonable and Non-discriminatory Y) in advance in their intellectual property policies, and license their standard essential patents to others in accordance with the principles of fairness, reasonableness and non-discrimination. FRAND commitment itself is relatively principled, and standard-setting institutions are unable to correct some business behaviors that violate FRAND commitment, and the patent law does not make special provisions on standard essential patents. Therefore, the author thinks it is necessary to clarify some basic principles of standardizing standard essential patents from the level of judicial judgment, guide the parties to reach a patent license agreement as much as possible, and prevent and reduce the occurrence of standard essential patent disputes in advance.