Garavi Gujarat USA

Court uphelds antitrust ruling against Google

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GOOGLE said on Friday (20) it will cooperate with India's competitio­n authority after the Supreme Court upheld stringent antitrust directives forcing the US firm to change how it markets its popular Android platform in a key growth market.

The Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) ruled in October that Google, owned by Alphabet Inc, exploited its dominant position in Android and told it to remove restrictio­ns on device makers, including those related to pre-installati­on of apps and ensuring exclusivit­y of its search. It also fined Google $161m.

Google has been concerned about India's decision as the steps are seen as more sweeping than those imposed in the European Commission's

landmark 2018 ruling against Android. About 97 percent of 600 million smartphone­s in India run on Android, while in Europe, the system accounts for 75 percent of the 550 million smartphone­s, according to Counterpoi­nt Research estimates.

On Thursday (19), Google lost a challenge in India's Supreme Court to block the CCI directives, getting seven days to comply, a move that will force the company to make changes to how it strikes agreements with device makers who use its free, open-source Android platform.

‘We remain committed to our users and partners and will cooperate with the CCI on the way forward,' a Google spokespers­on said in a statement to Reuters, without explaining the steps it could take.

‘We are reviewing the details of yesterday's decision which is limited to interim relief and did not decide the merits of our appeal,' it added.

India's highest court also said a lower tribunal - where Google first challenged the Android directives - can continue to hear the company's appeal and must rule by March 31. Google said on Friday it will pursue the appeal ‘in parallel'.

Hoping to block the implementa­tion of the CCI directives, Google had approached the Supreme Court by warning growth of its Android ecosystem will stall. It said it would be forced to alter arrangemen­ts with more than 1,100 device manufactur­ers and thousands of app developers if the directives kick in.

Google's Indian Supreme Court filing also stated ‘no other jurisdicti­on has ever asked for such far-reaching changes.'

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