Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Apple deserves a fine from the EU, as well

If Google is at fault for its monopoly in Android stores, Apple should be held to account for a similar violation

- Bloomberg Opinion

The European Commission had solid antitrust reasons for fining Google 4.3 billion euros for violations including the bundling of certain apps with the Android operating system — and for not going after Apple for similar behaviour. Yet, from a consumer’s point of view, Apple should get the same kind of attention.

The most important infraction by Google in the EU ruling is the “illegal tying” of its search and browser apps to the Android operating system. The search giant, the ruling said, made Android phone makers preinstall its search and browser applicatio­ns if they wanted to provide access to the Google Play Store, where almost all Android users get their apps. That, according to the European Commission, reduced the ability of other search providers and browser developers to compete because preinstall­ation creates a “status-quo bias”: Users are too lazy to research alternativ­es to apps that are already on their new phones.

The commission ruled that the bundling practices were illegal because of Google’s dominance in the markets of “licensable smart mobile operating systems and app stores for the Android mobile operating system.” The language matters because Apple (or Blackberry) doesn’t licence its operating systems to equipment manufactur­ers. It produces a full package and cannot be accused of putting illegal pressure on manufactur­ers. It makes intuitive sense for the EU to refrain from punishing Apple, too: If a product wholly belongs to a company, it can decide what to wrap into it.

But if Google is at fault for its de facto monopoly in Android app stores, Apple should be held to account for a similar violation. Although an Android user can easily shop in a few alternativ­e stores (though none is a match for the Google Play Store), an iPhone user cannot go outside Apple’s App Store without “jailbreaki­ng” the phone, a process that disables operating system updates. That makes Apple a monopoly in the truest sense of the word, and the US Supreme Court has agreed to hear a suit challengin­g this super-dominant position on behalf of consumers who have no choice but to pay Apple’s 30% commission for developers as part of every app’s price.

Like Google, Apple makes its preinstall­ed browser impossible to delete from a phone. Google, however, allows users to choose their own default applicatio­ns, including the browser and maps. Apple doesn’t do that; you can, for example, install Google’s Chrome browser and Google Maps on an iPhone, but they won’t launch by default when you click on a link in an email or another app. That’s even more anticompet­itive than simply preinstall­ing one’s own software and hoping users will keep it because it’s good enough.

As a consumer, I’d like all phone makers, whether their gadgets run Android, the iOS, Samsung’s Tizen, Linux or something even more exotic, to offer me a choice of apps. When setting up a new phone, users should see a list of browser apps, with ratings from users and independen­t reviewers, along with a list of email applicatio­ns and mapping and navigation apps. The lazier users could just hit a button for installing all the apps recommende­d by the operating-system producer. The experience of Microsoft, which was forced by the EU to give users a choice of browsers on Windows computers (it was fined twice for not doing so) shows that letting people decide for themselves creates a level playing field for competitio­n. Chrome, and not a Microsoft-developed programme, is now the most popular browser on Windows.

Independen­t developers are capable of producing better apps than those created by the big platform companies. They deserve a boost from a universal preinstall­ation ban. And the platform companies, too, can only benefit from more competitio­n: It’ll keep them in shape as app developers.

And yet there is a case to be made for regulatory interferen­ce in app preinstall­ation practices. European companies are unlikely to become operating system leaders in the foreseeabl­e future. But Europe does have a sizable app economy: In 2017, it employed 1.89 million people, compared with 1.73 million in the US. Giving this industry easier access to consumers should be a goal for European policy makers and regulators. The European Union’s latest Google ruling should be just a first step, not an isolated attack on one US company for something others do, too.

THE EUROPEAN UNION’S LATEST GOOGLE RULING SHOULD BE JUST A FIRST STEP, NOT AN ISOLATED ATTACK ON ONE COMPANY FROM THE UNITED STATES FOR SOMETHING THAT OTHERS DO, TOO

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