US judge orders Google to open its Android app store to competition

7 October 2024, 22:14

Play Store app icon on smartphone screen
Burgos, Spain, April 13, 2020: Play store application icon on smartphone screen. Mobile application icon of play store. Google Play Store. Picture: PA

The injunction will require Google to make several changes that the California company had been resisting.

A federal judge on Monday ordered Google to tear down the digital walls shielding its Android app store from competition as a punishment for maintaining an illegal monopoly that helped expand the company’s internet empire.

The injunction issued by US district judge James Donato will require Google to make several changes that the California company had been resisting, including a provision that will require its Play Store for Android apps to distribute rival third-party app stores so consumers can download them to their phones if they desire.

The judge’s order will also make the millions of Android apps in the Play Store library accessible to rivals, allowing them to offer up a competitive selection.

Judge Donato is giving Google until November to make the revisions dictated in his order.

The company had insisted it would take 12 to 16 months to design the safeguards needed to reduce the chances of potentially malicious software making its way into rival Android app stores and infecting millions of Samsung phones and other mobile devices running on its free Android software.

The court-mandated overhaul is meant to prevent Google from walling off competition in the Android app market as part of an effort to protect a commission system that has been a boon for one of the world’s most prosperous companies and helped elevate the market value of its corporate parent Alphabet Inc to two trillion dollars (£1.53 trillion).

Google signage
A judge is giving Google until November to make the revisions dictated in his order (Jeff Chiu/AP)

Google said in a blog post that it will ask the court to pause the pending changes, and will appeal against the court’s decision.

The judge also ruled that, for a period three years ending on November 1 2027, Google will not be able to share revenue from its Play Store with anyone who distributes Android apps or is considering launching an Android app distribution platform or store.

It also cannot pay developers, or share revenue, so that they will launch an app in the Google Play Store first or exclusively, and cannot make deals with manufacturers to pre-install the Google Play store on any specific location on an Android device.

It also will not be able to require apps to use its billing system or tell customers that they can download apps elsewhere and potentially cheaper.

The Play Store has been earning billions of dollars annually for years, primarily through 15% to 30% commissions that Google has been imposing on digital transactions completed within Android apps.

It is a similar fee structure to the one that Apple deploys in its iPhone app store — a structure that prompted video game maker Epic Games to file antitrust lawsuits four years ago in an effort to foster competition that could help drive down prices for both app makers and consumers.

A federal judge mostly sided with Apple in a September 2021 decision that was upheld by an appeals court. Still, a jury favored Epic Games after the completion of a four-week trial completed last year and delivered a verdict that tarred the Play Store as an illegal monopoly.

That prompted another round of hearings this year to help Judge Donato determine what steps should be taken to restore fair competition.

Google argued that Epic Games was seeking some extreme changes, saddling the company with costs that could run as high as 600 billion dollars (£459 billion). Epic contended Google could level the playing field for as little as one million dollars (£0.76 million). It is unclear how much the changes ordered by the judge will cost Google.

Although Epic lost its antitrust case against Apple, the judge’s ruling could still have ripple effects on the iPhone app store as another federal judge considers whether Apple is making it easy enough to promote different ways that consumers can pay for digital transactions.

Apple was ordered to allow in-app links to alternative payment systems as part of US district judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers’ decision in that case, but Epic contends the provision is being undermined with the creation of another commission system that stifles consumer choice.

The forthcoming Play Store shakeup could be just the first unwelcome shock that antitrust law delivers to Google.

In the biggest antitrust case brought by the US Justice Department in a quarter of a century, US district judge Amit Mehta in August declared Google’s dominant search engine to be an illegal monopoly too, and is now getting ready to start hearings on how to punish Google for that bad behaviour.

Google is appealing against the ruling in the search engine case in the hope of warding off a penalty that could hurt its business even more than the changes being ordered in the Play Store.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Survivor Michal Ohana speaks as members of the Jewish community wave electronic candles as they gather at a park in Sydney, Australia

Countries commemorate first anniversary of Hamas attack on Israel

Cissy Houston singing

Cissy Houston, Whitney’s Grammy-winning mother, dies at 91

Election 2024 Trump

Trump suggests migrants who commit murder do so because ‘it’s in their genes’

Tunisia's President Kais Saied waving

Tunisia’s Kais Saied wins second term after cracking down on opposition

Idan Shtivi

Israeli hostage Idan Shtivi confirmed dead a year on from October 7 attack

Mideast War Anniversary Gaza Destruction

US spends record amount on military aid to Israel in last year

A man walks past a crater caused by an Israeli airstrike

Israeli military ‘to launch operations on Lebanon’s southern coast’

Hurricane Milton seen from above

Hurricane Milton strengthens to Category 5 amid Florida evacuation preparations

R Kelly at the Billboard Music Awards in 2000 in Los Angeles

US Supreme Court declines to hear appeal from jailed singer R Kelly

Elon Musk wearing a Make America Great Again cap

US Supreme Court will not hear appeal from Musk’s X over warrant in Trump case

People protest on the one-year anniversary of the Hamas attack on Israel and call for the release of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, outside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s house, in Jer

War rages on multiple fronts as Israel marks one year since Hamas attack

The asteroid Dimorphos

Spacecraft blasts off to investigate scene of defensive cosmic crash

Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti

Kosovo lifts border crossing ban on entry of products from Serbia

A Russian Army “Grad” self-propelled 122 mm multiple rocket launcher fires rockets toward Ukrainian position at an undisclosed location

Ukraine strikes Russian oil hub as Zelensky says war in ‘very important phase’

Madeleine McCann (l) and prime suspect Christian Brueckner (r) who is on trial for different charges

Madeleine McCann suspect Christian Brueckner speaks for the first time during unrelated sex crime trial

Composite image of Kamala Harris and Donald Trump

US national debt could rise under Harris – but would surge under Trump – report