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US judge orders Google to open Android app store to competition

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A US District Judge has ordered Google to overhaul its mobile app business, requiring the company to allow users to download competing third-party Android apps or stores. This ruling is part of a recent antitrust lawsuit win by Epic Games, which found Google wields illegal monopoly power through its Android Play store. Specifically, the jury's order prohibits Google from engaging in several anticompetitive practices.

    1. You're going to end up paying something to make the world right after having been found to be a monopolist.
    1. The changes would put consumers' privacy and security at risk, make it harder for developers to promote their apps, and reduce competition on devices.
    2. Ultimately, while these changes presumably satisfy Epic, they will cause a range of unintended consequences that will harm American consumers, developers and device makers.
    1. We will keep advocating for what is best for developers, device manufacturers and the billions of Android users around the world.
    1. That is a rate they were able to charge because they were a monopoly.
    2. There's going to be a lot more incentive for developers to enter this market, and prices should be lower for consumers.
    1. But the judge correctly noted that once you have violated the antitrust laws, courts can order you to do affirmative things to undo the harm you caused, even though you didn't have the obligation to do those things in the first place.
    1. It shows that courts are not necessarily opposed to asking dominant platforms to share access with rivals in the name of competition.