Skip to main content

Microsoft demands $15 from Samsung for every Android phone sold

smartphone-patent-lawsuits-graphic
Image used with permission by copyright holder

What do you do if you’re a company that makes all its money from selling operating systems and a competitor springs up and offers its operating system to phone makers for free? Well, if you’re Microsoft, you’d try to get all phone manufacturers to give you $5-$15 for every Android handset they sell. So far, the strategy is working. Microsoft has signed deals with four companies, including HTC, in the last few weeks guaranteeing broad patent protection from Microsoft in exchange for an undisclosed number of dollars for each Android handset sold. Microsoft’s next target: none other than Samsung.

According to Reuters, Microsoft is demanding that Samsung pay $15 for each Android smartphone it sells due to software patent infringement by Google’s OS. Samsung may need some patent protection too. The company is embroiled in a bitter lawsuit with Apple, which alleges the South Korean company copied its iPhone.

Recommended Videos

It’s speculated that Samsung may accept a lower dollar amount ($10) if Microsoft gives it a discount on manufacturing Windows Phone handsets.

Though its Windows Phone OS has yet to take off, Microsoft is getting quite crafty and will soon pull in more revenue from Android devices than its own smartphone efforts. Like a mafia leader, Microsoft is both forcing manufacturers to pay it through threats of lawsuits and assurance of broad protection under its army of patents should a licencee get sued by another company–something that happens more often than you’d think in the mobile world. It’s costly $4.5 billion victory against Google in the recent Nortel patent auction will only bolster this strategy, we assume.

Jeffrey Van Camp
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Deputy Editor, Jeff helps oversee editorial operations at Digital Trends. Previously, he ran the site's…
You might be waiting a while longer for Samsung’s Android 15 beta
The Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra in Titanium Orange and in Titanium Silver.

Today is all about dealing with software delays. First, there's news that Apple users might have to wait a bit longer for Apple Intelligence to arrive with iOS 18 this fall. There's also news that Samsung's Android 15 beta may be later to release than we initially thought.

According to SamMobile, Samsung originally planned to release One UI 7 today. However, the release has been slightly delayed due to the public release of One UI 6.1.1 for the Galaxy S24 series.

Read more
Does the Samsung Galaxy Ring work with the iPhone?
The side of the Samsung Galaxy Ring.

Samsung has unveiled its newest product, the Samsung Galaxy Ring. While we mostly see iterative updates to Samsung's lineup of phones and smartwatches, the Galaxy Ring is a brand new product category for Samsung, and that’s a big deal.

Smart rings have become more popular in recent years as an alternative or complement to existing wearables, such as the Apple Watch or Galaxy Watch. The leading player in the smart ring market has been the Oura Ring, but that may be changing soon now that Samsung has entered the fray with the Galaxy Ring.

Read more
Here’s what the Windows Phone would look like in 2024 if Microsoft had never killed it
Windows phone mockup 2024

You probably haven’t thought about Windows phones in a while. After all, why would you? The last Windows Phone handset to be released was the Microsoft Lumia 650 in 2016, so it’s been a good eight years since anyone has been able to buy one. But that doesn’t mean that Windows phones don’t still have a cult following, and one of those followers, Proloy Karmakar, came up with a pretty interesting mock-up on X (formerly Twitter) of what a Windows phone might look like today.

https://twitter.com/proloyoncloud/status/1804124704594366773

Read more