ITALY FINES GOOGLE $123M FOR ABUSE
ROME: Italy’s Competition Authority (AGCM) has fined Google about 102 million euros ($123 million) for abusing its dominant position in the Italian market, the authority said in a statement on Thursday (Friday in Manila).
The watchdog said Google violated the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, since the US tech giant refused to allow an Italian company’s app to interoperate with Google’s Android Auto app, which mirrors features of an Android device on a car’s dashboard information and entertainment head unit.
The Juice Pass App, developed by Enel X’s Italian branch — the Enel X Italia, allows several services for recharging electric vehicles, including finding and booking a place at recharging stations.
“Through the Android operating system and the Google Play app store, Google holds a dominant position allowing it to control the access of app developers to end users,” AGCM explained.
Noting that about three-quarters of smartphones in Italy currently use the Android system, the authority said that Google “has unfairly limited the possibilities for end users to avail themselves of the Enel X Italia app when driving and recharging an electric vehicle.”
“Google has consequently favored its own Google Maps app,” it said.
This policy toward Enel X Italia app went on for more than two years. If it were to continue, it could permanently jeopardize the company’s chances of building a solid user base at a time of significant growth in sales of electric vehicles, according to the antitrust watchdog.