US judge to order changes in Google’s Android app store

15 August 2024, 08:24

A Google sign hangs over an entrance to the company’s new building in New York
Google Android App Attack. Picture: PA

A jury declared the Play Store a monopoly following a four-week trial last December.

A federal judge has indicated he will order major changes in Google’s Android app store to punish the company for engineering a system which a jury declared an illegal monopoly that has hurt millions of consumers and app developers.

Over the course of a three-hour hearing in San Francisco on Wednesday, US District Judge James Donato made it clear that the forthcoming shake-up he is contemplating will probably include a mandate requiring Google’s Play Store for Android phones to offer consumers a choice to download alternative app stores.

Mr Donato has been weighing up how to punish Google since last December when a jury declared the Play Store a monopoly following a four-week trial.

The verdict centred on Google’s nearly exclusive control over distribution of apps designed for Android phones and the billing systems for the digital commerce occurring within them — a system that generates billions of dollars in annual revenue for the company.

In protesting the judge’s potential requirements, Google has raised the spectre of consumers’ devices being infected by malicious software downloaded from third-party app stores, triggering “security chaos”.

We are going to tear the barriers down, that is going to happen. When you have a mountain built out of bad conduct, you are going to have to move that mountain

US Disctrict Judge James Donato

However, Mr Donato repeatedly hammered on the need for a major overhaul of the Play Store, even if it causes Google headaches and huge bills that the company has estimated could run as high as 600 million dollars (£467 million), depending on what the judge orders.

“We are going to tear the barriers down, that is going to happen,” Mr Donato told Google attorney Glenn Pomerantz. “When you have a mountain built out of bad conduct, you are going to have to move that mountain.”

Mr Donato said he is hoping to issue an order outlining the framework for the changes to the Play Store within the next few weeks.

Google’s tactics in the penalty phase of the Play Store case may foreshadow its strategy in a similar round of so-called “remedy hearings” that will be held in an even bigger antitrust case that resulted in a judge branding the dominant search engine as an illegal monopoly.

Those hearings focused on the crown jewel of Google’s empire are scheduled to start on September 6 in Washington, D.C.

In the Play Store case, Mr Donato still appears to be grappling with how much time he should give Google to make the changes to its Android operating system and Play Store, and also for how long the restraints he imposes should remain in effect.

Google wants 12 to 16 months to make the adjustments to ensure a smooth transition and avoid glitches that could affect the performance of Android smartphones.

Epic Games, the video game maker that filed the antitrust lawsuit that resulted in the Play Store being declared a monopoly, contends Google could do everything in about three months at a cost of about one million dollars (£778,000).

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

An elderly lady walks with a zimmer frame to her chair

AI foot scanner could keep people with heart failure out of hospital – study

A close up image of a The North Face fleece

North Face and Cartier customer data stolen in cyber attacks

Imagery of a Zilch payments card and a virtual card

Buy now pay later provider Zilch to launch first physical card

UK’s most EV-friendly city has been revealed by new research.

Cities with slowest EV charging times and least amount of chargers revealed

View of a VodafoneThree logo outside the firm's offices

Vodafone completes Three UK mega-merger to form ‘new force’ in mobile market

A hand holding a Monzo bank card and a mobile phone showing the Monzo app

Monzo annual profit surges as paying subscribers boost digital bank

Majestic British Airways Airbus A380 taking off from London Heathrow at sunset, amazing colors

UK airspace shake-up could slash journey times and cut flight delays for millions of passengers

File photo dated 30/05/25 of the saltmarsh at Abbotts Hall in Essex. Saltmarshes are 'significant' carbon stores, but are at risk from rising sea levels, new research reveals

UK's muddy saltmarshes vital to tackle climate change, report finds

Nigel Farage

Reform backs cryptocurrency tax cut as party receives first Bitcoin donations

Digital devices on office workplace table of young business woman

‘Young people and black workers at highest risk of workplace surveillance’

Debris from the Titan submersible, recovered from the ocean floor near the wreck of the Titanic, is unloaded from the ship Horizon Arctic at the Canadian Coast Guard pier in St. John's, Newfoundland, in June 2023

The shock household item discovered in 'sludge' of OceanGate sub wreckage

Google is facing a £25 billion legal claim in the UK, accusing the tech giant of abusing its dominant position in the online search advertising market

Google facing £25 billion legal claim over abuse of search advertising market

A hand holding a phone showing the Nvidia logo

Nvidia posts strong growth despite ongoing tariff challenges

Dinosaur fossils could hold the key to new cancer discoveries and influence future treatments for humans, scientists have said.

Dinosaur fossils with tumours could hold key to new cancer treatments for humans, scientists say

A SpaceX Starship spun out of control in a test flight

Elon Musk's SpaceX Starship spirals out of control before exploding in third consecutive mission failure

Some 13 mobile masts have been upgraded in four regions, with mobile networks now covering an area equivalent to thousands of football pitches

Rural Scots in four regions given ‘significant’ 4G coverage boost