Back in April, the European Commission officially filed its anti-trust complaint against Google in regards to Android and its pre-installed apps and services. At the time, Google was given until the 27th of July to refute the complaint but ended up nabbing an extention, bringing the deadline to the 7th of September. However, it looks like Google still doesn't quite have its case prepared, leading to a new deadline being set.
Google can be fined up to $7.4 billion if the EU Commission rules that antitrust laws were broken. This is just one of several antitrust cases out against Google in the EU as the company has also fielded complaints about search result rankings.
As Reuters reports, the European Commission has set a new deadline for the 20th of September, at which time Google will need to prove why Android isn't violating any European antitrust rules.
The case is similar to the one Microsoft faced several years back for shipping copies of Windows with just Internet Explorer pre-installed. In this instance, the EU is taking issue with Google's range of pre-installed apps and services on Android.
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KitGuru Says: I don't necessarily think that pre-installed apps discourage users from looking elsewhere for something they like better. However, Google may have a hard time convincing the EU of that. Do you guys think pre-installed Android apps hurt competing services?
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I think, at this point, everyone understands that smartphones are about apps and having apps pre-installed in no way keeps them from getting others.