EU fines Google a record $5 billion over mobile system

Published July 18, 2018
In this file photograph taken on November 4, 2016, a Google logo and Android statue are seen at the Googleplex in California. —AFP
In this file photograph taken on November 4, 2016, a Google logo and Android statue are seen at the Googleplex in California. —AFP
European Union Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager gives a joint press at the EU headquarters in Brussels on July 18, 2018. —AFP
European Union Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager gives a joint press at the EU headquarters in Brussels on July 18, 2018. —AFP

The European Union fined Google a record $5 billion on Wednesday for using the market dominance of its Android mobile operating system to force handset makers to install Google apps, reducing choice for consumers.

The EU said Google broke the rules when it required mobile phone producers to pre-install the Google Search and browser apps if they wanted to use Google's app store. Google also paid big producers to exclusively pre-install the Google Search app.

EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said “companies must compete on their merits,” playing by rules that favor consumers and open markets, and not restrict competition.

Google immediately responded that it would appeal. “Android has created more choice for everyone, not less,” said company spokesman Al Verney.

The EU's fine, which caps a three-year investigation, is the biggest ever imposed on a company for anticompetitive behaviour.

Vestager said that once the financial size of the company is taken into account, the 4.34 billion euro fine is not disproportionate. Google parent company Alphabet made $9.4 billion in profit in the first three months of the year and reportedly had over $100 billion in cash reserves.

In June last year, regulators already fined Google 2.42 billion euros ($2.8 billion) for favouring its shopping listings in search results.

Read next: Google is now advertising’s biggest traffic cop

But the EU's insistence that Google change its practices could have a bigger impact than the fine itself.

“The important thing is not to be distracted by the size of the fine, what is important is that Google has to change its abusive behavior,” Rich Stables, CEO of the rival search engine Kelkoo, told The Associated Press.

Android is an open-source operating system that Google lets mobile phone makers use for free. As a result, it is the most widely-used system, beating even Apple's iOS. The EU says Google has market shares exceeding 90 per cent in most European countries.

The EU wants to ensure that phone makers are free to pre-install apps of their choosing and allow for competition in services such as internet search. It also wants them to be able to more easily use altered or “fork” versions of Android.

Google argues that could hurt its ability to provide Android for free, as its main way of making money from the operating system is through advertising and the sale of content and apps. Its main rival in mobile systems, Apple, makes most of its money from the sale of devices.

Giving phone makers more freedom to use altered versions of Android could also hurt Google. Samsung, a hugely popular maker of Android devices through its Galaxy line, could break off and take much of the Android ecosystem with it.

Also read: Google ramps up Gmail privacy controls in major update

If Google's business activities are too harshly constrained, the argument follows, it might no longer be able to provide Android for free to handset makers.

Daniel Castro, vice president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a think tank in Washington, said the ruling “is a blow to innovative, open-source business models.”

The EU's clash with Google is reminiscent of its past battle with Microsoft. In that case, the EU said Microsoft used the market dominance of its Windows operating system to lead consumers to use Microsoft's browser, Internet Explorer. Microsoft was also fined and in the end was forced to give users a more explicit choice of browsers.

As technology's impact in modern life spreads, European regulators have set the pace in shaping rules for the industry. European governments tend to want to control companies more than in the US, which has given tech companies like Google a freer hand.

The difference in approach was highlighted after a scandal over the misuse of millions of Facebook users' personal data in political campaigns, including the 2016 presidential vote in the US. European regulators had already been working on tougher privacy regulation and in May enforced new rules that are influencing the way some companies operate outside of the region as well.

The Google crackdown also comes at a sensitive time for trans-Atlantic relations, with US President Donald Trump lambasting the EU as a “foe” only last week.

The US has imposed tariffs on EU steel and aluminum this year and the EU has responded with tariffs on American goods. The US is now also considering taxes on imports of European cars.

The US has also complained that the EU has mainly targeted US companies including also Apple and Amazon for breaking competition or tax rules.

“We have to protect consumers and competition to make sure consumers get the best of fair competition,” Vestager said. “We will continue to do it, no matter the political context.”

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