Google has been charged previously with many slots, such as Antitrust regulators of Content monopoly, Shopping from google, and now with its Android, EU antitrust regulators have charged Google for supplying Google products to Android users.

It is not wrong to say that Russian-based owned homeland search engine Yandex charges and claims Google’s regulatory system to EU Antitrust regulators. The complaint concerns Google’s relation practices with its Android devices users running.

Google Charged Against Anti-Competitive Business Practices in Russia

The Android devices are now commanded to work with Google’s server to display their product to sell more from Google.

As we have said, Google has some more of the previous cases from EU Antitrust regulators now they have more munitions to charge Google over Antitrust business practices.

Google already faced charges over anti-monopoly in late April 2015 and lost the case in which the Yandex search engine company won.

And now the same situation has been created over Google; a new case has been registered against Google for the Android mobile Operating system in the EU.

Russia’s opposition guard dog decided in September that Google had overstepped the law by requiring the pre-establishment of its inquiry application on cell phones running on its Android working framework.

Yandex is one of only a few organizations to freely whine about Android. Yandex is in front of Google in Russia with an inquiry piece of the pie of around 60 percent. However, it has been moderately growing abroad – a position it hailed when offering shares in a $1.3 billion first sale of stock on Nasdaq in 2011.

“We feel that the Russian finding of misuse of strength is informative and is a conclusion that can promptly be embraced in different locales, including the EU,” Yandex said. Yandex, which opponents Google in Turkey and, in addition, Russia and a few other previous Soviet republics, said its business advancement in Europe would depend, among different components, on the result of the European Commission’s examination.

It joins U.S. tech firm Disconnect, Portuguese application store Aptoide, and campaigning gathering FairSearch whose individuals incorporate Microsoft, Expedia, TripAdvisor, and French value examination site Twenga. “We trust the European Commission offers their offer in restoring some assistance with fairing rivalry and guaranteeing rise to chance to pre-introduce portable applications on Android-based gadgets for Google, as well as for different designers,” it said.

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