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Google The Courts

Google Files a Lawsuit That Could Kick Tinder Out of the Play Store (engadget.com) 59

Google has counter-sued Match seeking monetary damages and a judgement that would let it kick Tinder and the group's other dating apps out of the Play Store, Bloomberg has reported. Engadget reports: Earlier this year, Match sued Google alleging antitrust violations over a decision requiring all Android developers to process "digital goods and services" payments through the Play Store billing system. Following the initial lawsuit in May, Google and Match reached a temporary agreement allowing Match to remain on the Play Store and use its own payments system. Google also agreed to make a "good faith" effort to address Match's billing concerns. Match, in turn, was to make an effort to offer Google's billing system as an alternative.

However, Google parent Alphabet claims that Match Group now wants to avoid paying "nothing at all" to Google, including its 15 to 30 percent Play Store fees, according to a court filing. "Match Group never intended to comply with the contractual terms to which it agreed... it would also place Match Group in an advantaged position relative to other app developers," the document states. Match group said that Google's Play Store policies violate federal and state laws. "Google doesn't want anyone else to sue them so their counterclaims are designed as a warning shot," Match told Bloomberg in a statement. "We are confident that our suit, alongside other developers, the US Department of Justice and 37 state attorneys general making similar claims, will be resolved in our favor early next year."

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Google Files a Lawsuit That Could Kick Tinder Out of the Play Store

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  • I signed up for match.com and the initial 30 days is cheap but then after that it was like 90 bucks... I don't recall seeing that anywhere when I signed up. Luckily I used paypal and they refunded my money.
    • by Ronin Developer ( 67677 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @08:57PM (#62701072)

      I have a very busy friend who used Match.com looking for someone. She had a disagreement with a perspective âoematchâ who showed up at her workplace unannounced, insisted she give him âoeattentionâ and was upset that she wouldnâ(TM)t offer her services (she was a masseuse) for free or leave work early (she had a full schedule). They had gone on just one date prior.

      He reported herâ¦saying she invited him on a date at her workplace and expected him to pay for it - that she used Match for advertising.

      Match terminated her paid account with prejudice and refused to compensate her with a prorated refund and wouldnâ(TM)t listen to her side of the story.

  • Writing skills? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @08:14PM (#62700998) Journal

    How do people manage to become reporters with such poor writing skills:
    "now wants to avoid paying "nothing at all" to Google"

    If you avoid paying nothing, then you are paying something. I don't think this captures the facts of the issue correctly.

    • From the court filling:

      13 By choosing to make its apps available through Google Play, Match Group has ready

      14 access to billions of users and potential users of its apps and has earned hundreds of millions of

      15 dollars as a result. Yet Match Group wants more. It now attempts to ignore the terms to which it

      16 expressly agreed and further enrich itself by contending it should pay nothing at all to

      17 Google.

      So it looks like the parent article screwed up the gramma

    • by dohzer ( 867770 )

      "I could care less about this editorial mistake."

  • Party's Over? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by splutty ( 43475 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @08:17PM (#62701006)

    I think Google and Apple are starting to see the writing on the wall that their 30% greed party is coming to an end.

    I know in the EU there's now a lot of regulation going through different systems about exactly that.

    If you charge 30% and claim that's needed for 'development and security', but from your profit statements it turns out you only use at most 4% of that money to actually do that, then you might just have a bit of a problem.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      I think Google and Apple are starting to see the writing on the wall that their 30% greed party is coming to an end.

      I know in the EU there's now a lot of regulation going through different systems about exactly that.

      If you charge 30% and claim that's needed for 'development and security', but from your profit statements it turns out you only use at most 4% of that money to actually do that, then you might just have a bit of a problem.

      The thing about Google's 30% is that it's optional. You can release an application for Android however the hell you like. If you can find a platform to securely run payments for 4% (erm, you cant find one to run it for $0.04... the per transaction fee from the bank alone are more than that) then go for it, it's also on you to get users to trust that source.

      30% sounds like a lot... but remember that's only $0.30 per $1 transaction and a lot of fees for card transactions are fixed. It's nowhere near the sa

      • I don't think this is accurate. My understanding of the ToS is that you have to use Google's payment services and you have to pay the 30%. And the argument in favor of this is that if apps started prompting for various payment schemes, it would be a security nightmare as users wouldn't be able to tell legitimate payment processors from various scams. Google and Apple both made exceptions for things like Netflix where mobile phones aren't the primary platform for using those services.
    • At least with Android you can self-install an app if you want to. You don't *NEED* their app store.

      Google and Apple could bloody well charge 90% commission if they wanted. It's their own fucking stores, and they aren't obligated to have to sell anything made by anyone else to anyone. The only reason that they do it at all is because with a diverse set of applications, it increases the attractiveness of their own brand, but the companies don't actually *owe* anything to anyone. The fact that Apple's

    • I think Google and Apple are starting to see the writing on the wall that their 30% greed party is coming to an end.

      I know in the EU there's now a lot of regulation going through different systems about exactly that.

      If you charge 30% and claim that's needed for 'development and security', but from your profit statements it turns out you only use at most 4% of that money to actually do that, then you might just have a bit of a problem.

      30% is pretty good compared to what developers got before App Stores. You had to upfront all costs, find a distributor who could get you into stores, cover returns, wind up with unsold inventory; all in hopes of selling enough to make a living while gettin 30% of the sale price, if you are lucky. Then there was the whole problem of piracy.

      App stores greatly reduce the up front costs, handle all the bookkeeping, give developers access to a worldwide user base, making developing a new app a lot less of a fi

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Now do Facebook.

  • Asking for a friend.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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