National Post

Potential suit likely to argue Google doesn’t Play fair

New action will be fourth by government­s

- Diane Bartz Paresh Dave and

WASHINGTON • State attorneys general are planning a third lawsuit against Alphabet Inc’s Google, this one focused on the search and advertisin­g giant’s Play Store for Android phones, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

The lawsuit is expected to be filed in February or March, the sources said, and it would follow complaints about Google’s management of its Play Store even though the company was originally seen as more open about its app store than Apple Inc .

Including a u.s. Justice department lawsuit filed against Google in October, the possible new action would be the fourth government lawsuit brought against the Silicon Valley company since late 2020. All allege that Google abused its dominance of the internet search business or otherwise broke antitrust law.

Google bans apps with objectiona­ble content from its store, and further requires that some apps use the company’s payment tools and pay Google as much as 30 per cent of their revenue.

Those and related policies prompted criticism from app developers. Google’s Play Store is far more widely used than similar products from Amazon.com Inc, Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd, Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd and others.

The probe will be headed by attorneys general of utah, North Carolina and New york, and other states are also expected to join, one of the sources said.

Google said in a statement that its Android mobile operating system has allowed users access to multiple app stores, which means that developers have options.

“Most Android devices ship with at least two app stores pre-installed, and consumers are able to install additional app stores,” Sameer Samat, vice president of Android and Google Play, said in a statement. “This openness means that even if a developer and Google do not agree on business terms the developer can still distribute on the Android platform.”

Video game maker Epic Games Inc sued Google and Apple separately in u.s. district court in August, accusing the companies of using their dominance to charge app developers an “exorbitant” fee of 30 per cent on sales and of imposing other restrictio­ns.

Apple, whose app store does not directly compete with Google’s because it is not compatible with Android devices, is under Justice department investigat­ion for its policies. After more than a year of investigat­ions into the four major tech platforms, including Facebook Inc, Amazon and Apple, the Justice department was first out of the gate with a lawsuit against Google focused on its search business and search advertisin­g.

Also, state attorneys general filed lawsuits, one led by Texas and focused on advertisin­g. The other targeted Google’s alleged efforts to extend its dominance in search to newer markets, like voice assistants.

 ?? Dado RUVIC / ILLUSTRATI­ON / REUTERS FILES ?? Government­s in the United States have launched three lawsuits against Google and a fourth is expected early this year over Google’s management of its Play Store.
Dado RUVIC / ILLUSTRATI­ON / REUTERS FILES Government­s in the United States have launched three lawsuits against Google and a fourth is expected early this year over Google’s management of its Play Store.

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