Deccan Chronicle

EU order opens new doors for mobile cos

Users may now opt to replace the new defaults with Google products

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San Francisco, July 19: A EU antitrust judgment against Google on Wednesday invites more competitio­n from software developers including Microsoft, Amazon and Samsung, but still leaves them at an disadvanta­ge, industry executives and analysts told Reuters.

The EU found that the Alphabet Inc unit illegally bolstered its dominance in the mobile business since 2011 by forcing Android device makers to preinstall Google Search and its Chrome browser together with its Google Play app store, paying them to pre-install only Google Search, and blocking them from using modified versions of Android.

The ruling aims to open the door for Samsung, Lenovo and other phone makers that have been tied to selling devices full of Google applicatio­ns to start using some alternativ­e software from the likes of Microsoft and Amazon without the device losing too much of its consumer appeal, according to EU press statements and EU sources on condition of anonymity.

Smartphone vendors could even charge the other software makers to have their browsers or search engines set as the default on Android smartphone­s, said Ian Fogg, vice president of analysis at OpenSignal, which helps wireless carriers map their networks.

Phones that feature Amazon’s Alexa search or Microsoft’s Bing search throughout should still be able to pre-install popular Google apps such as Google Maps or YouTube as the EU envisions it, EU sources said.

Microsoft, Amazon, Samsung and Lenovo declined to comment.

Users may opt to replace the new defaults with Google search or Google Chrome apps anyway, but at least some would stick with the default options, according to the EU.

But the top smartphone makers are hesitant to promote inferior alternativ­es, an executive at one highend Android device maker said on the condition of anonymity. Smaller hardware firms lack the market share to significan­tly affect Google’s business, the person said.

Google also can continue to pay hardware makers to be the exclusive search provider, the business from which it derives most of its revenue, on a deviceby-device basis. The EU did not specify any limits on Google’s ability to outbid smaller players in search such as DuckDuckGo.

Google is “systematic­ally set to continue to dominate the industry,” said Robert Marcus, a former member of Microsoft’s mobile strategy team and now general partner at investment firm Quantum Wave Capital.

The ruling should give smartphone makers the ability to develop phones based on Fire OS, a version of Android customized and distribute­d by Amazon, the EU statements said. — Reuters

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