Current:Home > NewsGoogle antitrust trial focused on Android app store payments to be handed off to jury to decide -ProfitSphere Academy
Google antitrust trial focused on Android app store payments to be handed off to jury to decide
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-10 09:39:46
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal court jury is poised begin its deliberations in an antitrust trial focused on whether Google’s efforts to profit from its app store for Android smartphones have been illegally gouging consumers and stifling innovation.
Before the nine-person jury in San Francisco starts weighing the evidence Monday, the lawyers on the opposing sides of the trial will present their closing arguments in a three-year-old case filed by Epic Games, the maker of the popular Fortnite video game.
The four-week trial included testimony from both Google CEO Sundar Pichai, who sometimes seemed like a professor explaining complex topics while standing behind a lectern because of a health issue, and Epic CEO Tim Sweeney, who painted himself as a video game lover on a mission to take down a greedy tech titan.
Epic alleged that Google has been exploiting its wealth and control of the Android software that powers most of the world’s smartphones to protect a lucrative payment system within its Play Store for distributing Android apps. Just as Apple does for its iPhone app store, Google collects a 15-30% commission from digital transactions completed within apps — a setup that generates billions of dollars annually in profit.
Google has staunchly defended the commissions as a way to help recoup the huge investments it has poured into building into the Android software that it has been giving away since 2007 to manufacturers to compete against the iPhone and pointed to rival Android app stores such as the one that Samsung installs on its popular smartphones as evidence of a free market.
Epic, though, presented evidence asserting the notion that Google welcomes competition as a pretense, citing the hundreds of billions of dollars it has doled out to companies such as game maker Activision Blizzard to discourage them from opening rival app stores.
The jury’s verdict in the case will likely hinge on how the smartphone app market is defined. While Epic has been contending Google’s Play Store is a de facto monopoly that drives up prices for consumers and discourages app makers from creating new products, Google drew a picture of a broad and fiercely competitive market that includes Apple’s iPhone app store in addition to the Android alternatives to its Play Store.
Google’s insistence that it competes against Apple in the distribution of apps despite the company’s reliance on incompatible mobile operating systems cast a spotlight on the two companies’ cozy relationship in online search — the subject of another major antitrust trial in Washington that will be decided by a federal judge after hearing final arguments in May.
The Washington trial centers on U.S. Justice Department allegations that Google has been abusing its dominance of the online search market, partly by paying billions of dollars to be the automatic place to field queries placed on personal computers and mobile devices, including the iPhone.
Evidence presented in both the San Francisco and Washington revealed Google paid $26.3 billion in 2021 for its search to be the default choice on a variety of web browsers and smartphones, with the bulk of the money going to Apple. Without providing a precise dollar amount, Pichai confirmed Google shared 36% of its revenue from searches in the Safari browser with Apple in 2021.
Epic’s lawsuit against Google’s Android app store mirror another case that the video game maker brought against Apple and its iPhone app store. The Apple lawsuit resulted in a monthlong trial in 2021 amid the pandemic, with Epic losing on all its key claims.
But the Apple trial was decided by a federal judge as opposed to a jury that will hand down the verdict in the Google case.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Jeremy Renner attends the premiere of new series just months after snowplow accident
- In 1984, Margaret Thatcher was nearly assassinated — a new book asks, what if?
- Eco-idealism and staggering wealth meet in 'Birnam Wood'
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Michelle Rodriguez on fast cars and fiery dragons
- Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's Rep Slams Speculation They Plan to Sue Over South Park Episode
- Why Ana de Armas Believes Social Media Ruined the “Concept of a Movie Star
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- 'John Wick: Chapter 4' wonders, 'When does this all end?'
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Judi Dench Shares It’s Impossible to Learn Lines Due to Eye Condition
- 'Black is Beautiful' photographer Kwame Brathwaite has died at 85
- No substance, just 'Air'
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Eva Marcille, Dr. Jackie Walters and Lauren-Ashley Beck Get Real About Being Black on Reality TV
- A monument of Harriet Tubman now replaces a statue of Christopher Columbus in Newark
- The 'vanilla girl' trend shows that beauty is power
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Drag queen (and ordained minister) Bella DuBalle won't be silenced by new Tenn. law
Pink Responds After Being Accused of Shading Christina Aguilera With Lady Marmalade Criticism
'Wait Wait' for April 8, 2023: 25th Anniversary Spectacular, Part II
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
'Air' is a soleless podia-pic about the origins of a shoe
Megan Fox Addresses Cheating Rumors About Machine Gun Kelly Relationship as She Returns to Instagram
An ode to playlists, the perfect kind of sonic diary