Google will require rivals to bid in order to become listed as alternative search providers on Android smartphones, a move to try to keep additional antitrust scrutiny at bay.
Starting next year, Google will prompt users to make a choice between Google and three other rival options as their default search provider. Google invited search providers to bid as part of an auction on the new choice screen, which will appear when a user sets up a new Android smartphone or tablet in Europe for the first time.
The European Commission, the bloc’s antitrust body, last year fined Google €4.3-billion (R70-billion) for strong-arming device makers into pre-installing its Google search and Chrome browser, giving it a leg up because users are unlikely to look for alternatives if a default is already preloaded. The EU ordered Google to change that behaviour and threatened additional fines if it failed to comply.
Eric Leandri, CEO of Paris-based search engine Qwant, said his company would look into taking part in the auction in order to reach customers but called it “a total abuse of the dominant position” to “ask for cash just for showing a proposal of alternatives”.
Google in April started presenting users with a choice of alternatives to Google search and Chrome. But FairSearch, an anti-Google group of competitors and an official complainant to the EU, at the time said the changes were insufficient because it kept Google as the default on all Android devices. The bloc’s antitrust chief, Margrethe Vestager, recently said “it seems somewhat challenging to produce a choice screen that really will give consumers a choice”.
If deemed satisfactory, the changes could help Google avoid additional fines for failing to comply with the EU’s order. FairSearch didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Auction
A European Commission spokeswoman said the EU would be “closely monitoring the implementation of the choice screen mechanism” and noted that the changes allow rival search engines the possibility to strike deals with smartphone and tablet manufacturers to pre-install their services.
An auction is a fair and objective method to determine which search providers are included in the choice screen,” Google said in a blog post on Friday announcing the changes. “It allows search providers to decide what value they place on appearing in the choice screen and to bid accordingly.”
Google said it would conduct auctions on a per-country basis, where providers with successful bids would be included in the choice screen for the year starting 1 January 2020, with subsequent auction rounds occurring once per year. Search providers will state the price they are willing to pay each time a user selects them from the choice screen, with the three highest bidders appearing in the choice screen, Google said.
Qwant’s Leandri said paying for users’ clicks also wouldn’t guarantee that they actually use the search engine.
People will still be able to change the default search provider after set-up, Google said. The choice screen only would show where the phone manufacturer has a pre-install deal with Google search. The screen wouldn’t show up on a Samsung that has a pre-install deal with Bing, for example. Users would still be able to have access to Google Play and other Google apps.
The auction solution mimics a similar remedy offered by Google in a separate EU antitrust case, where it was ordered to offer equal treatment to e-commerce rivals. It opted to sell space in an ad panel at the top of its search page and split off the Google Shopping unit, which must bid against rivals without financial help from parent firm Alphabet. Google has sought to make additional changes after rival services said they still weren’t seeing much traffic to their own websites.
Google’s approach is a far cry from Microsoft’s solution about a decade ago. In 2009, Microsoft appeased European regulators, who were concerned about the dominance of its Internet Explorer Web browser, by agreeing to present Windows users with a choice of as many as a dozen alternatives when setting up the operating system. Rival browsers were selected based on their existing popularity, and presented to users in a random order. Microsoft didn’t charge competitors if a user selected to use them over its own product.
As a result, Internet Explorer was downgraded from being a default to just an option among many. Analysts saw the accord between Microsoft and the EU as a smart way of dissolving the antitrust issue and avoid further fines, although it arrived at a time when Internet Explorer’s dominance was being eroded by Mozilla’s Firefox and Google’s Chrome. — Reported by Natalia Drozdiak, with assistance from Nate Lanxon, (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP