The Philippine Star

Nice try, but the EU’s case against Google won’t make tech more competitiv­e

-

European and American officials need to find more effective ways to ensure competitio­n in industries dominated by a handful of big players.

The New York Times editorial

The European Union’s decision to fine Google $5.1 billion for abusing its dominance in the smartphone business unearthed some dubious corporate practices, but the penalty and an order for Google to change its practices are, regrettabl­y, unlikely to make the technology industry more competitiv­e.

After a yearslong investigat­ion, Europe’s top antitrust official, Margrethe Vestager, on Wednesday said that Google had unfairly exploited its market power by imposing restrictio­ns on manufactur­ers like Samsung that use the company’s Android software on their smartphone­s. This case is important because about 80 percent of smartphone­s sold in Europe and globally run on Android, and Google is by far the largest player in internet search. The company is also the biggest player in online advertisin­g, with a nearly 40 percent market share last year, and it has a commanding presence in a number of other internet businesses, like video, email and maps.

The European Union had three main complaints: Google required cellphone companies that wanted to offer its Play app store or search to preinstall 11 of its apps as a bundle, whether they wanted all of them or not. The company gave the largest manufactur­ers money if the only search they installed was Google’s. And the company prohibited manufactur­ers from developing phones on altered versions of Android not approved by Google if they wanted to use any of its other services. The company strongly disputed the allegation that its practices are anticompet­itive, arguing that they are designed to help recoup Google’s investment in Android, which it licenses free to device manufactur­ers. Google, which plans to appeal the decision, asserts that Android is a much more open and competitiv­e platform than its main rival, which is used by the iPhone, in which Apple controls both the device and the software. Indeed, Android devices tend to be cheaper than iPhones because manufactur­ers like Samsung, Motorola and LG make competing phones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines