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Google agrees to $36 million fine over Android search deals

Google agrees to $36 million fine over Android search deals

Hindustan Times9 hours ago
Google has agreed to pay a Aus$55 million (US$36 million) penalty for striking "anti-competitive" deals to pre-install only its own search engine on Android mobile phones sold by two leading Australian telecoms firms.
Australia's competition authority said it had launched proceedings in the Federal Court and jointly submitted with Google Asia Pacific that it should pay the fine.
The court would now decide whether the agreed penalty and other orders were "appropriate", the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said in a statement released on Monday.
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"Conduct that restricts competition is illegal in Australia because it usually means less choice, higher costs or worse service for consumers," said the commission's chair, Gina-Cass Gottlieb.
Google had cooperated with the competition commission and admitted reaching the deals with telecoms firms Telstra and Optus, which were in place from December 2019 to March 2021, the body said.
In return for only installing Google's search engine, Telstra and Optus had received a share of the resulting advertising revenue, the commission said.
"Google has admitted in reaching those understandings with each of Telstra and Optus it was likely to have had the effect of substantially lessening competition," it said.
Google said it was pleased to have resolved the regulator's concerns over the provisions, adding that they had not been in its commercial agreements for "some time".
"We are committed to providing Android device makers more flexibility to preload browsers and search apps," a Google spokesperson said.
Telstra and Optus entered court-enforceable agreements last year not to make new agreements to pre-install Google search as the default on Android devices, the competition watchdog said.
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Everything Google announced at 'Made by Google' event: Four new Pixel phones, a new affordable Pixel Buds, and much more AI
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Time of India

time26 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Everything Google announced at 'Made by Google' event: Four new Pixel phones, a new affordable Pixel Buds, and much more AI

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Built on TSMC's 3nm process node and co-designed with Google DeepMind, this isn't just about raw performance, though the 60% more powerful TPU and 34% faster CPU certainly don't hurt. The real story is how Tensor G5 enables genuinely useful on-device AI that actually works smoothly in daily use. The chip is the first to run Google's newest Gemini Nano model, which processes AI tasks 2.6x faster and 2x more efficiently than previous generations. This means features like Magic Cue, Voice Translate, and enhanced camera processing happen right on your phone without cloud dependence. Google's also built a completely new Image Signal Processor that handles everything from 10-bit video recording to 100x Pro Res Zoom, proving they're serious about making Pixel cameras genuinely competitive. What's impressive is that despite all this AI horsepower, Tensor G5 actually helps extend battery life to 30+ hours across the Pixel 10 lineup. 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Google Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL 5G mobiles launched: Price in India, offers and more
Google Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL 5G mobiles launched: Price in India, offers and more

Hindustan Times

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  • Hindustan Times

Google Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL 5G mobiles launched: Price in India, offers and more

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Amazon to revamp Fire tablets with Android in major Kittyhawk project
Amazon to revamp Fire tablets with Android in major Kittyhawk project

Business Standard

time41 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Amazon to revamp Fire tablets with Android in major Kittyhawk project

As part of a project known internally as Kittyhawk, Amazon plans to release a higher-end tablet as soon as next year offering the Android operating system software for the first time Reuters Amazon is plotting a big change to its Fire tablet lineup following years of escalating gripes from consumers and app developers over the company's homegrown operating system. As part of a project known internally as Kittyhawk, Amazon plans to release a higher-end tablet as soon as next year offering the Android operating system software for the first time, according to six people familiar with the matter. Since the Fire tablet introduction in 2011, Amazon has used what is known as a forked version of Android with custom modifications that make it work like a unique operating system. Amazon has long sought to undercut hardware rivals with inexpensive tablets and other devices that serve as a doorway to the firm's digital content, like e-books, videos and music. The devices have typically sold at or near manufacturing cost. But the focus on simplicity has held back sales, particularly among consumers who seek higher-performing devices. The multiyear project to switch to Android marks a philosophical change for the online retail giant, which has eschewed third-party operating systems and software in favor of its own. As a result, Amazon has offered its own app store requiring developers to make separate versions of their apps for Fire tablets, limiting the stores variety. If Kittyhawk is successful, Fire tablets could be more desirable for consumers who crave compatibility with other Android devices, the people said. They cautioned that Kittyhawk could be delayed or cancelled over financial or other concerns. Consumers have always expressed a concern about not having access to the latest Android versions, not having access to some of their apps because Amazon used their own store, said Jitesh Ubrani, a researcher at IT advisory firm IDC. It's meant more work for developers in this day and age of largely free apps or services. Ubrani noted that Amazon has nonetheless sold many millions of the tablets. Amazon has forfeited profits on the devices themselves in favor of making money on selling their associated services, like streaming movie rentals. But such inexpensive devices typically come with compromises like lower screen quality or battery life compared with pricier options. Amazon is the world's fourth-largest tablet seller, with 8 per cent of the market, just behind Lenovo's 8.2 per cent, according to second-quarter IDC data. Apple and Samsung were the market leaders with 33.1 per cent and 18.7 per cent, respectively. PRICIER TABLET The first Amazon Android tablet, slated for next year, will be pricier than current models, the people said. One of them said Amazon had discussed a $400 price tag, nearly double the cost of its current higher-end $230 Fire Max 11 tablet. IPads, by comparison, range from $350 to $1,200. Reuters could not learn additional specifications for the planned Amazon tablet, such as screen size and speaker quality or memory capacity. Amazon historically has avoided using software or other products from third parties, preferring to develop the services in-house or, barring that, to acquire a competitor. The Fire Phone smartphone championed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and released in 2014 failed to win over buyers in part because of its reliance on Fire OS, as well as its high price tag. Amazon canceled the device and took a $170 million writedown. But the Seattle retailer has more recently shown a willingness to use rivals services, particularly through its investment in startup Anthropic, whose Claude artificial intelligence software is the primary underpinning of Amazon’s Alexa+ voice assistant and a chatbot used by employees known as Cedric. The new Fire tablet, the people said, will use the open-source version of Android, meaning it does not require direct coordination with Google and can be customized. Amazon is planning to roll out some lower-priced tablets with its Linux-based Vega operating system now in some Fire TV devices, some of the people said. The full slate of tablets will eventually be powered by a version of Android, the people said. The Fire project's internal code name of Kittyhawk seems to derive from the North Carolina town near where the Wright brothers conducted the first powered flight in 1903. But it is also the name of a failed flying car startup backed by Google co-founder Larry Page that burned through hundreds of millions in cash. Amazon declined to discuss the meaning behind its Kittyhawk project name.

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