Eastern Eye (UK)

India fines Google £143m over anti-competitiv­e practices

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GOOGLE has been fined more than $160 million (£141m) by India’s anti-trust watchdog after a probe found that the tech behemoth was abusing its commanding position in the local smartphone market.

The California-based company’s Android mobile operating system is by far the dominant player in India and is run on 95 per cent of all the country’s smartphone­s, according to research agency Counterpoi­nt.

But the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) said the operating system was configured to

unlawfully crowd out rivals to YouTube, web browser Chrome and other popular Google apps.

Android had a suite of Google apps pre-installed on its phones, including the company’s own search engine, “which accorded significan­t competitiv­e edge to Google’s search services over its competitor­s”, a CCI statement said late Thursday (20).

“Markets should be allowed to compete on merits and the onus is on (Google) that its conduct does not impinge this competitio­n on merits,” it added.

The commission levied a fine of `13.4 billion (£143m) and instructed the company to allow Android users to remove pre-installed Google apps.

It also told Google not to enter into any agreement with smartphone makers that would encourage them to only sell Android-based devices or exclusivel­y use its software. The company said it would review the decision and weigh its next moves.

“The CCI’s decision is a major setback for Indian consumers and businesses, opening serious security risks for Indians... and raising the cost of mobile devices,” a spokespers­on told AFP.

Google faced a similar antitrust ruling in the European Union that found the company had imposed “unlawful restrictio­ns” on smartphone makers to benefit its search engine.

Last month the EU’s secondhigh­est court upheld a $4.1bn fine against the company. Global regulators have followed suit, with Google facing a barrage of cases in the US and Asia based on similar accusation­s.

India is home to the secondhigh­est number of smartphone users in the world, after China.

Its smartphone market grew 27 per cent year on year in 2021, according to Counterpoi­nt, with annual sales exceeding 169 million units. More than 60 per cent of phones sold in the country come from Chinese manufactur­ers including Xiaomi and Oppo.

Apple remains a minor player in the budget-conscious market but has seen some inroads in recent years.

 ?? ?? UNLAWFUL: Google also faced an anti-trust ruling in the European Union
UNLAWFUL: Google also faced an anti-trust ruling in the European Union

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