Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Business
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

After two extensions, Google finally responds to Europe’s antitrust complaints

Add as a preferred source on Google

Alphabet, the parent company of Google,has had a bit of a rough time in Europe after the European Commission accused it of abusing its dominance in the smartphone world by locking out competitors. After the company was given a little extra time to file its response to the charges, it’s now broken its silence and issued an official statement. On Thursday, Google fought back against two antitrust accusations, claiming that its services not only help consumers and advertisers, but even some competitors, in discovering digital information.

“We can’t agree with a case that lacks evidence and would limit our ability to serve our users,” Kent Walker, Google’s general counsel, wrote in a blog post. “We’re confident these cases will ultimately be decided based on the facts,” he added, noting that Google’s offerings “benefited consumers and merchants, and expanded competition.”

Recommended Videos

The time extension initially gave Google until the end of October to file a rebuttal to the accusations against it. This extension follows a previous one that gave the company until September 20. Originally, Google was given until April 2016.

While extensions like these are not uncommon, Google is taking a risk because they give the European Union additional time to dig up more information against it.

This case is focused on Google using Android to push its own apps and services at the expense of its rivals. If it is found that Google abused its dominance, it could face serious consequences — fines amounting to much as 10 percent of its annual income, or about $7.4 billion.

Citing a charge sheet, Reuters reported the EU had plans to fine Google and demand that the company stop sending payments to smartphone manufacturers, which are used as an incentive to pre-install Google apps.

This is not the only case that Google is working on with the EU — the company is also being probed over its shopping service, Google Shopping, and Google AdSense, its advertising business. The fact that it has three cases proceeding at the same time is likely working in its favor when it comes to getting deadline extensions.

Google recently lost an appeal in Russia over a similar complaint, so it will be interesting to see if its troubles there end up being mirrored in Europe.

Article originally published in October. Updated on 11-03-2016 by Lulu Chang: Added news that Google has responded to two antitrust complaints. 

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
WarpSpeed Wants to Be the AI Assistant That Finally Gets Your Life Organized
Trending Forward

Most of us don't need AI to write sonnets, generate pirate jokes, or explain quantum mechanics for the fifth time. What we really need is much simpler and much harder: help getting through the day.

Email. Calendar. Tasks. Chat. Reminders. Follow-ups. Missed messages. Half-finished replies. The bill you meant to pay. The lunch you forgot to confirm. The document someone sent three weeks ago that you now need "right away."

Read more
How can businesses simplify invoicing and payment processing?
Connect invoicing, payments, and accounting into one seamless workflow
Body Part, Finger, Hand

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with QuickBooks.

Creating an invoice is rarely the hardest part of getting paid. For most small businesses, it takes only a few minutes to prepare an estimate, send an invoice, or request payment. The work that quietly consumes time comes afterward, when payments need to be tracked, deposits verified, invoices marked as paid, and accounting records updated. Simplifying invoicing isn't just about creating invoices faster. It's about reducing the manual work that happens between sending an invoice, collecting payment, and keeping financial records accurate. QuickBooks is designed around that idea, bringing invoicing, payments, and accounting together in one connected workflow instead of treating them as separate tasks.

Read more
How Can Small Businesses Reduce Late Payments and Improve Cash Flow?
Simple strategies to speed up payments and strengthen your cash flow
Furniture, Table, Desk

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with QuickBooks.

Late payments are one of the most common reasons a profitable small business still runs into cash flow trouble. The fix isn't complicated, but it does require a more connected approach. Clear payment terms, faster invoicing, multiple ways to pay, and automated follow-ups all help reduce delays. Platforms like QuickBooks Payments bring those steps together in one workflow, helping businesses move from estimate to invoice, payment, deposit, and accounting without switching between separate tools.

Read more