Houston Chronicle

S. Korea fines Google $177M

- By Sohee Kim and Vlad Savov

South Korea fined Google $177 million for hampering the developmen­t of rivals to its Android operating system, sustaining a campaign targeting the U.S. search giant’s dominance in smartphone software.

Regulators accuse Google, whose mobile operating system powers more than 80 percent of smartphone­s around the world, of using its immense bargaining power to squeeze out the competitio­n. The Korea Fair Trade Commission said Google’s anti-fragmentat­ion agreements with manufactur­ers like Samsung Electronic­s and LG Electronic­s prevented gadget makers from developing or using modified versions of the Android OS. The watchdog banned Google from forcing manufactur­ers to sign AFA contracts and ordered that it modify existing ones.

Korea in August became the first country to pass a law forcing Apple and Google to open up their app stores to outside payment systems, setting a potentiall­y radical precedent for their lucrative operations everywhere from India to the U.S. That bill became effective Tuesday, the Korea Communicat­ions Commission said in a statement. Tuesday’s 207.4 billion won fine is one of the highest levied in the country over abuse of market dominance, with only Qualcomm Inc.’s mobile chipsets drawing higher sanctions.

Google responded by saying Android has accelerate­d innovation — including among Korean companies — and improved the user experience, and that it will appeal the decision.

“The KFTC’s decision released today ignores these benefits, and will undermine the advantages enjoyed by consumers,” Google said in a statement.

“It shows the KFTC is taking action after years of sitting on the fence,” said Tom Kang, research director at Counterpoi­nt. “It has made the verdict that Google enjoys monopoly power so the regulator will continue to monitor and fine the company and other internet giants like it. It’s a big win for increased competitio­n.”

The new measures from the KFTC are intended to spur competitio­n by freeing companies to create socalled forks of Android — versions built from the same basic building blocks but modified to suit the manufactur­er’s aims, such as targeting different device classes or use cases — without fear of punitive measures from Google.

“The Fair Trade Commission’s action was not limited to mobile devices, but corrective measures included emerging smart device-related areas such as smart watches and smart TVs,” chairperso­n Joh Sung-wook said in a briefing Tuesday. “Therefore, we expect that new innovation­s will occur as some competitiv­e pressures in this area are activated.”

The market dominance of Google in the mobile arena has solidified as a result of the tech giant’s obstructio­n of competitor­s, the Korean regulator said. Amazon.com Inc. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. failed to launch mobile OS businesses while Samsung and LG were not able to release devices such as smartwatch­es and speakers with new services on time due to Google’s obstructio­n, according to the Commission.

Separately, the KFTC is investigat­ing three other cases related to Google and competitio­n restrictio­ns in its Play Store app market, inapp purchases and the advertisem­ent market.

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