Google's latest European Union woes could mean opportunity knocks for app developers stymied by contracts that pre-install the US giant's own services on Android phones and tablets, according to analysts and companies.
The Alphabet unit is expected to face an antitrust fine over Android in the coming days that could top last year's record EUR 2.4 billion ($2.8 billion) penalty for shutting out rivals to its shopping search service.
But more significant could be an accompanying order freeing up phone manufacturers to choose non-Google apps to install on Android phones. That would yield crucial real estate for app developers given that about 80 percent of smart mobile devices use Android.
"It would dramatically help us," said Gabriel Weinberg, chief executive officer of Paoli, Pennsylvania-based DuckDuckGo, a search engine that doesn't track users. "It's clear to me that people would choose other options if the choice was easier to make." DuckDuckGo said it hasn't complained to the EU about Google, pointing to the effort involved.
The EU's investigation targets contracts that require smartphone makers who want to install Google's Play store to add a bundle of Google services. While the EU's primary concerns home in on pre-installations of Google's search and Chrome browser, the suite of apps also include the search giant's email and mapping services.
Handset makers don't have as much of an incentive to pre-load their devices with additional competing apps if Google's are already on there, according to the EU. European officials worry that users stick with the default they get on their phones, reinforcing Google's dominance in the case of its search service.
Google dominates mobile search in Europe, with 97 percent of the market, while its Chrome web browser has a 64 percent market share on mobile, according to web traffic analysis firm StatCounter. The company's control of ads on millions of Android phones will help it capture a third of all global mobile ads in 2018, bringing in some $40 billion (roughly Rs. 2.7 lakh crores) in sales outside the U.S., said research firm eMarketer.
Email is "probably the most vulnerable one for Google," according to Daniel Gleeson, a senior analyst at research firm Ovum , if device makers use other email apps like Microsoft's Outlook in default settings, acting on what could be more flexible contracts with Google following the EU's decision. There is "definitely potential in maps," he said, if other apps were to gain ground against Google Maps and gain advertising revenue from location services, citing Here Technologies as a potential rival.
Google and the Brussels-based European Commission declined to comment for this article. Microsoft declined to comment about possible opportunities for its services. Here Technologies didn't respond to a request for comment.
OsmAnd, an offline mapping application, reported "a really huge difference" when it was pre-installed on a small manufacturer's tablet in 2013, said Chief Executive Officer Victor Shcherb. "It created a huge traffic from day zero on that device," which was later discontinued.
Shcherb said his company competes only indirectly with Google Maps since his application tends to cater to users looking for specialist mapping services, such as for hiking. Still the EU's decision could help the app reach a wider audience, he said.
Google ceded some market share to Russian search engine Yandex NV after it agreed to allow users in the nation to choose their own preferred search engine on Android phones. Yandex says it now has nearly 48 percent of the search market, up from around 37 percent. Google also paid a fine as part of a settlement of an antitrust probe by Russia's Federal Anti-Monopoly Service last year.
Nudging computer users to choose their own internet browser was also the EU's preferred way to end more than a decade of antitrust disputes with Microsoft in 2009, which helped push some web users to shiny new web software made by Google - at that time just a precocious new kid on the block.
Android is "a multi-lane highway of choice" and people can download competing apps at any time, the company's general counsel Kent Walker said in a 2016 blog post. Google's apps account for less than one-third of preloaded apps on a device, he said, and "a consumer can swipe away any of our apps at any time."
Google also argues that its actions to police the Android ecosystem and prevent multiple versions of Android - also part of the EU probe - help app developers to make products that work across millions of devices. Giving away Android for free also helps reduce smartphone costs, it said. Google relies instead on advertising to make money from Android.
People download lots of other apps, according to a survey by the Developers Alliance, an association of 70,000 developers, which counts Google as a member.
Among 2,000 Android users surveyed in France, Germany, Italy and Spain, around 28 percent download additional search apps, 29 percent download at least one new app store, and 23 percent download at least one alternative web browser to the apps that come pre-installed, the alliance said.
Critics say it's hard to challenge Google. Aptoide, an app store that competes with Google Play, filed an antitrust complaint with the EU in 2014 over contracts that prevent device makers engaging with it.
Aptoide Chief Executive Paulo Trezentos said the company has been growing "but not so much in the [handset] manufacturing side." It is increasingly relying on users downloading the store via the web browser. The app store is rarely pre-installed, partly because it can't counter Google's offer to device-makers to bundle its app store with other Google apps.
Some analysts see little hope for increased competition in markets where Google has become well-entrenched.
"This order will come way too late because user addiction has moved from the [Play] store to the Google services," said Richard Windsor, owner of research company Radio Free Mobile. It's "going to be a tough call" for anyone to come up with a better range of products than Google.
© 2018 Bloomberg LP
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