Google may face $11 bn penalty in EU anti-trust case for its Android OS

Android shop
The European Commission is geared up to impose a fine of $11 billion on Google in a second anti-trust case of abusing its dominance via Android mobile operating system, according to a report in the Financial Times on Wednesday.

The EU investigation has found that Google imposed illegal terms on Android device makers which harmed competition and cut consumer choice.

Google’s Android OS is used in more than 80 percent of the world’s smartphones and is vital to the group’s future revenues as more users search on their mobile gadgets.

The EU began the anti-trust case in 2016, accusing Google of imposing licensing conditions for the Android OS. Google could be fined up to $11 billion but the actual penalty may be less.

In 2017, EU antitrust investigators fined Google $2.7 billion for violations pertaining to its treatment of comparison shopping services.

Google later introduced changes in how it compares shopping offers in its search results.

European regulators have in the past investigated Microsoft, Intel, Apple, Google, Facebook, and Amazon.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest

More like this
Related

Service Center of OPPO Expands Across India with 150+ Service Center 3.0 Pro Locations in 2026

The Service Center of OPPO is undergoing a major...

Xiaomi 2025 Results: Revenue Hits RMB 457.3 bn Despite Pressure on Smartphone Business

Xiaomi has reported strong revenue growth in the fourth...

Apple to Introduce Ads in Maps Across U.S. and Canada, Expanding Services Revenue Strategy

Apple is set to introduce paid advertising within Apple...

XR Market Growth Surges 44.4% in 2025 as Smart Glasses Redefine Future of Extended Reality

Global extended reality (XR) device shipments recorded a strong...