The Asian Age

Google braces for bumper anti- trust fine

European Union’s fine over Android OS may top the amount fined in 2017 in shopping case

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Brussels, July 16: Google is set to face a record- busting EU antitrust fine this week over its Android mobile operating system but rivals hoping that an order to halt unfair business practices will help them may be disappoint­ed.

The European Commission’s decision, delayed by a week by US President Donald Trump’s visit to a NATO summit in Brussels last week, is expected on Wednesday.

It comes just over a year after the Commission slapped a landmark 2.4- billioneur­o ($ 2.8 billion) penalty on Google, a unit of Alphabet, for favoring its shopping service over those of competitor­s.

The EU penalty is likely to exceed the 2017 fine because of the broader scope of the Android case, sources familiar with the matter have told Reuters.

The EU sanction comes in the midst of a trade conflict between the US and the EU, which has hit back against US tariffs on European steel and aluminum by targeting $ 3.2 billion in US exports with higher duties.

European Commission president Jean- Claude Juncker will meet Trump in Washington on the trade issue next week.

The Android decision is the most important of a trio of antitrust cases against Google. With the company able to make its ads show up in more smartphone apps than any other tech rival, Google’s app network has quietly become a huge growth engine.

The high payouts to app developers, coupled with its entrenched relationsh­ip with millions of advertiser­s, has turned Google into the main revenue source for many apps. Its Play Store accounts for more than 90 per cent of apps downloaded on Android devices in Europe.

Its popularity in turn could mean an uphill battle for EU antitrust regulators seeking to level the playing field for Google’s rivals by ensuring that users can download from competing app stores and that smartphone makers are free to choose preinstall­ed apps.

Regulators say Google has tilted the field in its favor by forcing smartphone makers to preinstall Google Search together with its Play Store and Chrome browser, sign agreements not to sell devices on rival Android systems and also pay smartphone makers to only pre- install Google Search on devices.

Google has denied the charges, saying that bundling search with its Google Play allows it to offer the entire package for free, and that smartphone makers and users have a wide choice.

Regulatory action is probably too late because of Google’s entrenched position, said analyst Richard Windsor at research company Radio Free Mobile. “Users in the EU are now completely accustomed to using Google services and have come to prefer them,” he said.

“Hence, I think separating Google Play from the rest of Google’s Digital Life services would have very little impact as users would simply download and install them from the store,” Windsor said.

The Android case was triggered by a 2013 complaint by lobbying group Fair Search whose members at the time included competitor­s such as Nokia and Microsoft.

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