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Android Google Government Cellphones

India Widens Antitrust Probe Into Google's Android Dominance (reuters.com) 65

An anonymous reader quotes Reuters: Google appears to have misused its dominant position in India and reduced the ability of device manufacturers to opt for alternate versions of its Android mobile operating system, Indian officials found before ordering a wider probe in an antitrust case. A 14-page order from the Competition Commission of India (CCI), reviewed by Reuters this week, found Google's restrictions on manufacturers seemed to amount to imposition of "unfair conditions" under India's competition law....

The Indian case is similar to one Google faced in Europe, where regulators imposed a $5 billion fine on the company for forcing manufacturers to pre-install its apps on Android devices. Google has appealed against the verdict.

By making pre-installation of Google's proprietary apps conditional, Google "reduced the ability and incentive of device manufacturers to develop and sell devices operated on alternate versions of Android", the CCI said in the order. "It amounts to prima facie leveraging of Google's dominance".

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India Widens Antitrust Probe Into Google's Android Dominance

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  • by Tomahawk ( 1343 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @04:02AM (#58853410) Homepage

    Has any study or research been done by any of these companies to see if there is actual demand or want for an Android device that doesn't come with Google's apps?

    I know there are a few on the market, Amazon's Fire tablets being a prime example. I bought one of these as a gift for someone some time back, and ended up buying a more expensive Samsung tablet 6 months later because the Google apps couldn't be installed on the Fire.

    My own personal expectation is that the Google Apps come with Android -- they are part of Android, imo. And if I found that a device I was considering buying didn't have these installed, then I wouldn't purchase the device.

    So while Google are "forcing" manufacturers to install these (and that typically means "If you want to access the Google-owned-and-run Play Store, then these apps must be installed as a part the licence"), I think the vast majority of users _want_ to have these apps installed.

    Is that "antitrust" ?! Manufacturers can still just use a different Android marketplace if they don't want to go with Google. But, then again, most users will want access to Google's Play Store, as well as the Google apps.

    • Has any study or research been done by any of these companies to see if there is actual demand or want for an Android device that doesn't come with Google's apps?

      I know there are a few on the market, Amazon's Fire tablets being a prime example. I bought one of these as a gift for someone some time back, and ended up buying a more expensive Samsung tablet 6 months later because the Google apps couldn't be installed on the Fire.

      My own personal expectation is that the Google Apps come with Android -- they are part of Android, imo. And if I found that a device I was considering buying didn't have these installed, then I wouldn't purchase the device.

      So while Google are "forcing" manufacturers to install these (and that typically means "If you want to access the Google-owned-and-run Play Store, then these apps must be installed as a part the licence"), I think the vast majority of users _want_ to have these apps installed.

      Is that "antitrust" ?! Manufacturers can still just use a different Android marketplace if they don't want to go with Google. But, then again, most users will want access to Google's Play Store, as well as the Google apps.

      I think the key question is: Why did people around here get their panties in a twist when Microsoft abused their monopoly in this way but make excuses when Google does the same thing?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Also, why aren't apple being dragged over the coals for the same thing?

        • Apple doesn't have an operating system that other manufacturers install on their hardware. Apple doesn't use that to leverage other conditions out of competitors.

          For better or for worse, Apple is happy capturing a high paying minority share of the mobile market. They're elitist that way and have been since the introduction of the Mac.

    • No manufacturer ever asks the users what they want. As Mr. Ford once beautifully said "The customer can get any color he wants, as long as it's black." Given how much trouble it has cost to put LineageOS on my phone, I think the vast majority will opt for a phone that is working without any trouble. But I have to say that a phone that is under my control instead of under Google's is well worth the trouble.

      Official Android updates contain far more unwanted Google crapware than security fixes, and if users ge

      • If Mr. Ford hadn't managed to produce the least expensive automobile that consumers could buy, then he would very much need to care about what color the customers wanted. When it comes down to it, if you ask most customers what they want the answer will be "same product only much cheaper" as cost is almost always the top driver for purchase decisions especially when the cost differences are large. Perhaps you get some slightly more savvy customers that will examine things like TCO or average cost over the l
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If those apps were so essential to the Android experience then Google would not have to mandate that manufacturers install them. They would get installed anyway, no need to risk anti-trust investigations.

      In practice a lot of manufacturers, and phone companies, would replace Google apps. Their own crappy search engine, their own email client with ads, their own app store so they can get their 30% cut. Many consumers would be too clueless to avoid it, same as they keep buying phones with an unremovable Facebo

      • by Tomahawk ( 1343 )

        Well the apps aren't always installable. In the example I gave, the Amazon Fire, none of the Google Apps were available on the Amazon Marketplace. And sideloading them didn't work as various components (Google Play Services, for example) weren't installed and couldn't be installed. Amazon went out of their way to ensure that the Google apps couldn't be used on the Fire.

        From a user experience, this is just crap.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I completely agree, Amazon tablets are crap. But people still buy them. Google apps aren't as essential to most people as some here assume.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            Amazon tablets are crap. But people still buy them. Google apps aren't as essential to most people as some here assume.

            Amazon's tablets are crap, and people are only buying them because they can do what people want cheaply.

            As in, they're stupidly cheap ($50 delivered next day), and you can watch your Netflix and Amazon Prime video on them. Most games people have heard about on TV or in ads will be there as well, as with a browser.

            Google Play isn't, of course, but people aren't looking for Android only app

  • I wonder if they were pressured into it by Huawei? Sort of pushing back because of all the interference from the US government?
    • I wonder if they were pressured into it by Huawei? Sort of pushing back because of all the interference from the US government?

      I got a Huawei tablet in Singapore last week. All the Google stuff is there, play store and all.

  • Samsung (Score:5, Informative)

    by dohzer ( 867770 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @04:33AM (#58853492)

    Oh god how I wanted to uninstall everything Samsung from my last Samsung Galaxy. The fact I couldn't was why I went for the Pixel.

    • So you opted instead for being unable to uninstall Google software from your Google phone.

      • So you opted instead for being unable to uninstall Google software from your Google phone.

        I think that's exactly what dohzer wanted, though it should be pointed out that Pixel phones have unlockable bootloaders so you can unlock and flash a custom image that doesn't include the Google apps if that's what you want.

  • Seriously, the massively large internet companies really need to be broken up, perhaps vertically, and then allowed to compete. And not just American companies.

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