Report: Google to Face U.S. Antitrust Probe Over Android


The Federal Trade Commission is reportedly investigating Google's Android business to determine whether the tech giant used its mobile operating system to stifle competition.


According to Bloomberg, a number of tech companies complained to the Department of Justice earlier this year, and the DOJ decided to let the FTC handle the investigation.

At issue is Google's practice of requiring device manufacturers to pre-load certain Google apps on their phones if they want those devices to run the Android operating system. There is a stripped-down version of Android, known as the Android Open Source Project or AOSP, which does not require the bundling of Google apps. But if you do want Google apps, it's an all or nothing deal. Either you pre-load your device with all of Google's apps (like Maps, Google Play, YouTube, etc.) or none of them. There's no mixing and matching, so you couldn't pre-load Google Maps but Bing Search, for example.

The issue has reportedly been a point of contention between Google and Samsung, one of the biggest Android device manufacturers.

But does the practice run afoul of antitrust laws? That's what the FTC is reportedly investigating. The FTC and DOJ declined to comment, while Google did not immediately respond to PCMag's request for comment.

Earlier this month, Russia found Google guilty of abusing its dominant market position with its app-bundling practices, and the European Commission is conducting a similar investigation.

The EU also probing Google's desktop search practices, but in the U.S., the FTC cleared Google of any wrongdoing when it comes to search.

Also in the U.S., California consumer rights law firm Hagens Berman filed a lawsuit over the bundling issue last year, claiming the company purchased Android Inc. a decade ago with the intent of cornering the market by preloading its own suite of apps onto compatible devices. A judge dismissed that case in February, though.

Source: pcmag.com
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