Business Standard

S Korea finds Google guilty of restrictin­g Android forks

$177-mn fine comes as govt seeks to target Google, Apple duopoly

- HEEKYONG YANG

South Korea's antitrust regulator has fined Alphabet Inc's Google 207 billion won ($176.64 million) for blocking customised versions of its Android operating system (OS), in the US technology giant's second setback in the country in less than a month.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) said on Tuesday Google’s contract terms with device makers amounted to an abuse of its dominant market position that restricted competitio­n in the mobile OS market.

Google said in a statement it intends to appeal the ruling, saying it ignores the benefits offered by Android’s compatibil­ity with other programs and undermines advantages enjoyed by consumers.

“The Korea Fair Trade Commission's decision is meaningful in a way that it provides an opportunit­y to restore future competitiv­e pressure in the mobile OS and app market markets,” KFTC Chairperso­n Joh Sung-wook said in a statement. The antitrust regulator said this could be the ninth-biggest fine it has ever imposed.

KFTC said Google hampered competitio­n by making device producers abide by an “anti-fragmentat­ion agreement (AFA)” when signing key contracts with it regarding app store licences.

Under the AFA, manufactur­ers could not equip their handsets with modified versions of Android, known as “Android forks”.

That has helped Google cement its market dominance in the mobile OS market, the KFTC said.

Under the ruling, Google is banned from forcing device makers to sign AFA contracts, allowing manufactur­ers to adopt modified versions of Android OS on their devices.

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