Google has been hit with a landmark €4.34bn (£3.8bn) fine by the European Union over “serious illegal behaviour” to secure the dominance of its search engine on mobile phones.
The European commission imposed the record penalty after finding that the US tech firm required smartphone manufacturers to pre-install Google’s search and browser apps on devices using its Android operating system, which is used on 80% of all phones. Manufacturers that refused Google would not be allowed to use its Google Play online store and streaming service.
Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s competition commissioner, said Google has used its Android mobile phone operating system “to cement its dominance as a search engine”, preventing rivals from innovating and competing “and this is illegal under EU antitrust rules”.
Vestager added: “The vast majority of users simply take what comes with their device and don’t download competing apps.”
She added that the apps were not free as consumers “pay with their data” to use them. “Or to slightly paraphrase what [US free market economist] Milton Friedman has said: ‘there ain’t no such thing as a free search.’”
For more read the full of article at The Guardian