Skip to main content

Here’s how LG could make money from its dead mobile business

Following several years of struggling while trying to compete with biggies like Samsung and Apple, LG finally gave up and exited the smartphone business in April 2021. LG admitted that the mobile phone space had become “too competitive” and that the company was better off focusing its energy on other areas. Given that the company has been doing well since it shuttered its loss-making mobile division, the decision was generally thought to be a step in the right direction.

LG’s exit from the smartphone business, however, also left it with a lot of patents that it could no longer use. And by a lot, we mean around 20,000 individual patents that relate to 4G, 5G, and other wireless technology. With the company unable to use these patented technologies on its devices anymore, LG estimates that it costs around 20 billion won ($16,166,000) every year just to “maintain” them.

According to The Elec, this astronomical maintenance cost is prompting the top management at LG to start licensing these patents to smartphone brands. According to the report, LG is considering creating a spinoff company these patents would be transferred to — which in turn would license them to anyone who wishes to use them, including its erstwhile competitors. LG has also hinted at selling some of it patents to companies who are interested in buying them. LG, however, wants these companies to also ensure they compensate the LG employees who were behind these patents.

Some of these patents, could, however, remain with LG for as long as possible because of their sheer importance. In fact, the company has already indicated that it plans to use them to develop its own smart appliances and Internet of Things products. LG also announced late last year that some of these patents would help accelerate the development of its vehicle component solution business.

What makes LG’s decision to license/sell its patents at this time interesting is the fact that several companies — including automaker Volkswagen — had approached LG about purchasing these very patents a year ago, right after the company shuttered its mobile business. It remains to be seen if these companies would still be interested in acquiring them now that LG is considering selling them.

Editors' Recommendations

Rahul Srinivas
Rahul is a smartphone buff turned tech journalist who has been tinkering with all things mobile since the early 2000s. He has…
Folding laptops at CES 2022 should have learned from mobile’s mistakes
Aasus Zenbook 17 Fold folded in half.

Screens that fold up are already a hot topic in the smartphone world, but at CES 2022 they featured far more heavily on laptops than ever, showing the burgeoning tech is moving beyond small handheld devices. However, while the laptops all look really cool, familiar problems haunt them, making me concerned that the trend is a case of companies misguidedly trying to pique our interest in a new way while the innovation still struggles to find its feet on mobile.
Folding laptops
The Asus Zenbook 17 Fold captured the most attention because, according to our Senior Staff Writer Jacob Roach, who tried the machine out at CES 2022, “it’s one of the first real, working foldable laptops.” There have been others, but they’ve all been early prototypes or concepts. The Zenbook 17 Fold’s big selling point is one that echoes that of folding smartphones: Open it, and you’re greeted by a big screen (17 inches in this instance), in a case the same size as a non-folding 13-inch laptop.

Asus’ laptop with a folding screen was joined by the Samsung Flex Note, another model with a 17-inch screen folded inside a 13-inch laptop-sized case. Samsung is a relatively old hand when it comes to folding smartphones, having pioneered the folding mobile trend along with Huawei in 2019. Intel also showed foldable laptop displays at the show, claiming manufacturers would use the platform on laptops we can buy in 2022.

Read more
Oppo could soon join Apple, Google, Samsung, and Huawei in making mobile chips
Oppo Find X3 Pro camera module

At the Pixel 6 launch event, Google detailed the capabilities of its in-house Tensor chip, joining the likes of Samsung and Huawei as Android smartphone manufacturers making their own mobile chips. Now, it is being reported that Oppo too, could join them to reduce its reliance on Qualcomm.

As per a report from Nikkei Asia, Oppo is tipped to be working on high-end mobile chips for its flagship smartphones. Like Google, Oppo could be doing so to gain more control over core components. The Tensor chip allows Google to enhance its A.I. capabilities in the camera department and provide more years of security updates. Oppo's mobile chips could provide similar capabilities to the flagship devices. It would also reduce the company's reliance on other semiconductor manufacturers like Qualcomm and MediaTek. This chip news makes Qualcomm's red flag tweet particularly ironic and a sign of troubled waters ahead for the company.

Read more
LG’s new foldable display bends both ways and doesn’t crease
LG's new "folding window display" material.

LG says it's developed a new material that can create displays with “a surface as hard as glass and folding parts as flexible as plastic.”

Called “Real Folding Window,” the new material could revolutionize flexible smartphone displays, paving the way for durable screens that eliminate troubling issues such as creasing. The new technology also enables both inward and outward bending,  an exciting prospect that could lead to completely new handset designs.

Read more