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Microsoft and Nokia consortium files EU antitrust suit over Google Android

FairSearch, a consortium made up of Google competitors including Oracle, Microsoft and Nokia, has filed an antitrust suit in the European Union against Google over its Android smartphone platform. A statement on the groupโ€™s website accuses Google of โ€œdeceptive conduct to lockout competition in mobileโ€. The group also claims Googleโ€™s support of Android is an […]
Andrew Sadauskas
Andrew Sadauskas

FairSearch, a consortium made up of Google competitors including Oracle, Microsoft and Nokia, has filed an antitrust suit in the European Union against Google over its Android smartphone platform.

A statement on the groupโ€™s website accuses Google of โ€œdeceptive conduct to lockout competition in mobileโ€.

The group also claims Googleโ€™s support of Android is an โ€œanti-competitive strategy to dominate the mobile marketplace and cement its control over consumer internet data for online advertising as usage shifts to mobile.โ€

Citing Androidโ€™s strong position in the smartphone market and mobile search advertising, the lobby group accuses Google of requiring handset vendors, including Samsung and HTC, to pre-install other services, such as Google Maps or YouTube.

โ€œGoogle achieved its dominance in the smartphone operating system market by giving Android to device-makers for โ€˜freeโ€™,โ€ FairSearch states.

โ€œBut in reality, Android phone makers who want to [use Android] must-have Google apps such as Maps, YouTube or Play are required to pre-load an entire suite of Google mobile services and to give them prominent default placement on the phone.

โ€œThis disadvantages other providers, and puts Googleโ€™s Android in control of consumer data on a majority of smartphones shipped today.โ€

The news comes despite Samsungโ€™s recent moves to include more of its own software and service platforms on its devices, including the recent announcement of a web browser partnership with Firefox developer Mozilla.

This, in turn, has prompted denials of a rift from both Google and Samsung.