Europe Is Going After Google For Anti-Competitive Behavior With Android
Google now faces more competition charges in the European Union. The EU has accused Google of skewing the market against competitors with its Android mobile operating system. The 28-member state bloc's antitrust commissioner concluded in a preliminary decision that the search giant has abused its dominant position in the market by imposing restrictions on Android device makers. "What we found is that Google pursues an overall strategy on mobile devices to protect and expand its dominant position in internet search," said Margrethe Vestager, the EU competition chief. "The commission is concerned that Google's behaviour has harmed consumers by restricting competition and innovation," she added. "Rival search engines and mobile operating systems have not been able to compete on their merits. This is not good." Google has three months to respond to the aforementioned charges. The New York Times reports: Europe's antitrust charges might not necessarily lead to financial or other penalties against Google. If it is found to have broken the region's rules, though, the company may face fines of up to 10 percent of its global revenue, or roughly $7 billion, the maximum allowable amount. Google denies that it has broken European competition rules, saying that its dealings with cellphone manufacturers like Samsung and HTC, among others, are voluntary, and that rival mobile services are readily available on its Android software.According to EU, Google has breached antitrust rules by:1. requiring manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Google's Chrome browser and requiring them to set Google Search as default search service on their devices, as a condition to license certain Google proprietary apps; 2. preventing manufacturers from selling smart mobile devices running on competing operating systems based on the Android open source code; 3. giving financial incentives to manufacturers and mobile network operators on condition that they exclusively pre-install Google Search on their devices."The joke in Google's cafeteria today will be "let them use bing," said Andrew Parker, VC. "So disappointing that browser dominance on Android is the only thing that the EU can get worked up about," Blaine Cook, co-founder of Poetica noted. "The European Commission's statement of objections against Android lends further credibility to Oracle's $9B copyright claim," Florian Mueller, the founder of FOSS Patents blog wrote.
Given that Android is the only mobile OS that actually allows phone manufacturers/carriers to change the default search engine or browser.
Its also market, maps, calendar, etc. Gapps include so many services, many of them made in a way that the app developer has to choose between google proprietary and competitors. If some startup proclaims to compete with google, they usually get bought up, and don't continue to offer their services.
You know if the brits leave the EU, that's a good thing. They were the major stopgap hindering to get real work done against the banks in the late 00's banking crisis.
Europe announces that they're ruled by a bunch of fucktards that have no clue about anything.
Google doesn't control the search market or online advertising market.
The "PEOPLE" control those markets.
The fact that they turn to Google most of the time doesn't make Google the search and advertising landlord, the people using the internet do that.
People go to Google for consistent, reliabel search.
The people running websites realize this and turn to google for ad revenue.
See, it's the people's choice, not Google's.
If some startup proclaims to compete with google, they usually get bought up, and don't continue to offer their services.
Oh really?
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets...
My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
EU has no problem with the Google Play Store being the primary method of App sales/installs then? Google must make way more from search than the Play Store sales - pretty obvious I know but still, isn't this an area the EU should also look at? Same goes for Apple IMO.
This makes me so mad I'm going to install Firefox on my iPad. Oh wait.
Google has a browser? That can't possibly be true, because Microsoft's market dominance in the 90s ensured that their default Internet Explorer browser did not face any competition and is now the only browser that exists (at least according to the logic of EU regulators).
Support Right To Repair Legislation.
FTR: "1. requiring manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Google's Chrome browser and requiring them to set Google Search as default search service on their devices, as a condition to license certain Google proprietary apps;"
Let me change the company and product names:
"1. requiring manufacturers to pre-install Microsoft Office and Microsoft Internet Explorer and requiring them to set Microsoft Office Templates/Gallery and Bing as default search services on their PC, as condition to license certain Microsoft propietary apps;"
So, it's great to know that EU will force Microsoft to change Office image search to openclipart.org (for example) and that Internet Explorer will default to google.com on first start. Great!
Try turning off Google Play Services, and it will remove everything you've installed from Google Play. Yet if you don't turn it off, its a giant piece of Google spyware.
If you manage to root the phone, and disable Google Play, then lo-and-behold, all your apps continue to run without the need for Google to spy on you.
How on Earth does "The European Commission's statement of objections against Android lends further credibility to Oracle's $9B copyright claim,"?
This is a total non-sequitur.
Google's lock in system bases not on the google-owned apps (they are just a few, and yes they are very much used by users, but I guess people can come up with an alternative). The main reason to be locked in to Google is their proprietary APIs they offer to app developers. You can't simply take an apk and publish it on an alternative market, if there are no gapps installed on the device, most of the apps won't work.
So even if a competitor managed to replace all the gapps that are exposed to the user (maps, search, etc), they still would have a very hard time at building a competing app store. Most of the app developers don't want to port the app if the user count is low and nobody would install it if they couldn't install all the apps.
Its the same issue linux is facing. People don't care about operating systems. They want to install an application, and if it doesn't work, its not the fault of the application developers, its the fault of the operating system (at least for them).
From the first link:
...However, if a manufacturer wishes to pre-install Google proprietary apps, including Google Play Store and Google Search, on any of its devices, Google requires it to enter into an "Anti-Fragmentation Agreement" that commits it not to sell devices running on Android forks.
Which makes sooooo much sense from a software shop perspective as well as a historical one as well. You want there to be as singular as an install base as possible. Same goes for the Linux kernel. Is the commission going to go after that next?
A second section:
As a result, rival search engines are not able to become the default search service on the significant majority of devices sold in the EEA.
Defaults can be pretty powerful, just go ask Microsoft and IE. But that doesn't stop people from installing something that works better for them. See Chrome and Firefox, both of which were able to overcome IE's default market position by offering a product that people liked better. The same can and should happen here.
I think there should be a space between the search results and the advertisement side of Alphabet. However, that's an entirely separate issue from Android. The same goes for privacy. Both are important enough to break out on their own, so this? This is nuts.
I don't care Google Play is the only app store. I don't care they impose restrictions on vendors. I don't care. What I do care about is the lack of innovation in mobile browsers. The sole reason native mobile app are and remain so popular is the lack of a proper web-based alternative, which is likely to be actively held back by Apple and Google, effectively creating a monopoly for native apps while we could have had proper web-based apps (with offline support, proper notifications, proper storage, proper integration with GPS/camera/*) that just work everywhere for ages. But we don't. Because of our friends at Google and Apple.
0x or or snor perron?!
In all honesty I've tried to use other search engines but none of them come close to Google results, especially when searching on development terms, error messages and the like. Don't even get me started on Bing, it clearly steers the results towards something it can sell you. There seems to be a funny philosophy that Bing was made with.. it seems to be orientated to people, places, and things rather than point me to the actual answer to a development question that is buried in an internet comment somewhere.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
You really like to have a single monopoly dominate your life, don't you?
It's a great thing, both for Britain and the rest of the EU. In particular, the rest of the EU will have to learn to be more responsible, rather than relying on the UK to bail them out.
You mean the banking crisis that was mostly created by government-run banks making loans based on political pressure?
Without Google twisting the arms of device manufacturers and carriers, you'd have to buy a new device for every new minor version of Android that is released.
For example, they've actually required businesses to raise their prices, claiming that low prices were predatory. There's little evidence that predatory pricing can succeed as an anticompetitive tactic.
The licensing terms of Google Mobile Services allow Google to restrict how crapware gets forced on users. That's probably a good thing. If you allow manufacturers to set other default app stores and applications, you're giving an incentive to manufacturers and carriers to load up phones with more crapware.
EU antitrust laws are seriously fucked up.
If you have any respect at all for your own credibility, do not quote Florian Mueller. I'd say he's an ass, but that would be disrespectful to the Donkey.
"The ferrets, they're every where I tell you!"
Why does Slashdot continue to given any credence to this assclown?
Don't kid yourself: tools like Margrethe Vestager exist for two simple reasons. First, wounded European pride, namely the fact that Europe is far behind the US in innovation and high tech. Second, uncompetitive European corporations are trying to win through political machinations when they can't win in the market.
Never surrender! We know what happened when IE4 was IT. I am immune to mixed metaphorlogical redress, unto the union of bittersweet bread on the brain.
Do you know how to tell when Florian Mueller is lying?
When the fingers are typing or mouth is open.
Can't we make a deal? We push over the UK to the US and we get Canada in return. We are used to multi-lingual countries.
That way everybody will be happy.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Open Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome and compare the results for certain queries. For example, using Edge when searching for the site from Arnaldo Jabor commentaries on CBN channel, the first result displayed by Google differs when using Chrome when searching for the same keywords.
Google doesn't admit because it hurts their interests on monitoring people with high IQ. Their intention is to steal peoples ideas, no matter if scientific or crappy cartoonish ideas. Google MUST die.
And AGAIN: I have a functional brain with functional memory. I don't need to be doped with your troll ideas to think about that little turd. I already wake up aware that shit is still alive, therefore still living to disturb my serenity. I'm not changing the big "NO" that your retarded face deserves, no matter who You're. (to me You are a former prostitute protected by the police. You may not be one, but that's the impression that works to avoid sharing my life with your shitty richy life. I'm just waiting the perfect day to throw shit at your house, to make sure You have something to remember)
Ok, based off what I read, 1 & 3 are true but they are common business practices used in multiple areas. 2 is completely false but market forces make it look true.
A good example of 1 & 3 is Coke. If you decide to have Coke in your business, Coke will give you things as promotional considerations. Signs with you name on it plus the Coke logo, etc. But to get those you have to not carry Pepsi. That's the crux of 1 & 3. If you want to carry both, then you don't get the goodies that go along with them. You can preload Play with something else, but not Maps, Gmail and the other unless you agree to exclusivity for the preinstalled items. (The Play concession was made a while back to satisfy some anti-trust worries). More manufactures don't do that though because of the incentives plus market forces. People want Google's stuff there and ready. Google isn't holding a gun to people's head saying "Use Gmail or else". There are plenty of option and I use one myself in the form of AquaMail to my non-Gmail e-mail.
As for #2, hello, phones being sold running Cyanogen and others based on AOSP derivatives, but they don't have a big market share yet, or maybe ever. Market forces (people) aren't creating a demand for them. Thus the big guys don't make Cyanogen phones because people won't buy them en mass. And it's not for a lack of trying. Look at Samsung and all the times they've tried to do Tizen as an Android alternative. They never got anywhere. The mass market is happy with what they have. Phone OSs are a two horse race (Android and iOS). You're not going to force the market to accept more if they don't want it, but that's seems to be what the EU is angling for with #2.
This is just how I see it. I'm sure someone is going to come along with some conspiracy and collusion theory as to why I'm wrong, but this is a situation where the simple answer is the answer.
Thing is all the pro-leave people seem bloody nuts and completely ignorant of the facts.
particular, the rest of the EU will have to learn to be more responsible, rather than relying on the UK to bail them out.
TIL UK == Germany.
You mean the banking crisis that was mostly created by government-run banks making loans based on political pressure?
What government run banks? They only became government run after going bust and getting bailed out.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
How did the UK ever bail out the rest of the EU? You seem to be confusing the UK and Germany.
As European, fsck the EU. I could expunge more for the fsck to EU reasons, but the coffee sitting in front of me is more attracting than rebutting EU silly claims.
"Rival search engines and mobile operating systems have not been able to compete on their merits. This is not good." I don't even know what to say about this! If you can't compete on your own merits then where is the problem? Give me something better and maybe I'll try it. WebOS was pretty good, but it couldn't compete on it's merits either. We all see where it is. Make a better product. Google and Apple did and they are winning. On their own merits.
You know if the brits leave the EU, that's a good thing. They were the major stopgap hindering to get real work done against the banks in the late 00's banking crisis.
Sadly, this may well be the case. To all those in UK who are for brexit because 'EU limits the sovereign power of Parliament': is that really such a bad thing, when you think about it? Would it really be sensible to put more power into the hands of the likes of Osbourne, Cameron, ...? And they are actually at the more decent end of the spectrum, as Tories go. EU has brought a lot of benefits to UK, quite apart from the economic gains.
Don't get me wrong - I am very much a Eurosceptic, as most sensible people would be, but I think even in its current configuration, it is still the right thing to stay in EU and work to change it from within. I don't buy into the 'passionate' arguments for or against, I have much more respect for level-headed reasoning and balanced views. So far in the debate, the leave side sound far more emotional in their arguments than the remain side - and especially Jeremy Corbin's pragmatic views ring true, exactly because he so clearly doesn't like EU much, but on balance has to concede that it is in fact better to stay in. That's how I feel, and I think a lot of people agree.
All these idiot investors can't be idiots, cos they're rich, right?
Q: What kind of person thinks profitability is a worthwhile indicator of whether a thing is good/bad?
A: Greedy, blind and arrogant.
And that what Management/stockholders of every company is.
Fuck Google with their monopolist hubris up their stupid asses.
Google should just change all the default search engines to Yahoo!. That'll teach them.
I would definitely vote for that. However, in that case the UK will break up and a small portion will come back to us.
...requiring manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Google's Chrome browser...
If it is wrong for Microsoft to do it, then it must also be wrong for Google, even if their practise isn't unpopular (yet).
Cyanogenmod and FireOS are two competing OS's using AOSP as a basis which are found preinstalled on phones. It's not because the latter isn't available in Europe that Google should be blamed for it.
If we leave it will be an economic disaster for us, and in the long run give Europe a boost as e.g. Frankfurt takes over as the biggest European financial services hub.
On the other hand, we will lose control of our borders and immigration will become easier. Cameron's deal tries to tighten the rules on freedom of movement with spouses. If the UK leaves the EU will most likely ditch those changes, and of course the UK will be forced to accept freedom of movement as that's a non-negotiable part of the EU free trade system. The UK won't be able to make the rules stricter, and won't be able to veto countries like Turkey entering the EU, so EU immigration will increase.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Is it just because they're American? They're not actually doing any of this shit. Carriers are free to bundle another search, and they don't have to put google search on the home screen. They can also bundle another browser or whatever if they like. The truth is that there is no viable competition for most gapps. It's not because google has done anything to prevent it; if someone else can come up with something better, then they are free to put it in the app store and people will download it.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
As opposed to the power going to arbitrarily appointed bureaucrats? Yes, definitely. Part of the point of a democratic government is allowing the people to make somewhat foolish choices in leadership, and then throw them out at the next election.
... those complaints could apply to Apple aswell.
Just sayin'.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
If a phone or tablet doesn't search Google, it's not called Android. You'll have to call it something else, there are multiple distributions derived from Android that do not have this restriction.
The EU has a parliament by the way. And it has even a mechanism for direct democratic voting. But I admit that it could be more legitimized by the peoples, yes.
It's a good thing for the EU. It's a bad thing for us, as our authoritarian MPs will no longer be slapped down by the EU when they decide to go completely crazy.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
What I can't understand is why anyone takes that useless twat Muller seriously.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Can't we make a deal? We push over the UK to the US and we get Canada in return. We are used to multi-lingual countries.
That way everybody will be happy.
Sorry, the UK tried twice to stay a pert of us and we turned them down. Canada might go for it since they turned down our generous attempt to get them to join us, but France might object to having to learn Canadian French, eh?
I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
That they are common do not mean they are intentonal. There is a difference between having to pay a fee per shipment of goods, and being able to bundle goods per shipment. The former is a example of why restaurants only carry soft drinks from one brand: To order more than 1 brand would require more than 1 shipment, which costs money.
Which is also why shipment services exist in the first place. To a business it might be cheaper to hire a third party to pick up all the goods and deliver it, then to have have individual shipments from manufacturer.
Thats very different from the goods manufacturer requiring mono product sales, for Discount. Bulk discount is also a different thing.
Many European banks are part government owned and have been for a long time.
You mean like yourself?
It's a market that wouldn't even exist but for Google. Prior to this search engines were shitty, pure text searches. Some were toying with auto rankings of search phrases based on which results people actuay clicked on (I think Ask Jeeves(?) had a patent on that?)
Anyway, this much deeper search is all Google, which is why people went to them.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Many European banks are part government owned and have been for a long time.
The british banks went bust just fine without government ownership, so I'm really not sure what the hell you're talking about.
You mean like yourself?
I see you chose not to dispute my dispute of your claim that the UK is Germany.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
I'm not justifying the action in any way, but be aware that regulators tend to look at market power when determining whether a business's marketing violates competition regulations. Coke and Pepsi are more or less equals, so Coke discriminating against a store that sells Pepsi isn't something that necessarily violates monopoly laws.
I suspect the logic here is that Android with Google's services is installed on virtually everything that isn't Apple. Moreover, Google's middleware with Android is the only real choice for mobile phone manufacturers as iOS isn't available to them, and nothing else is taken seriously by the market. Therefore, an argument can be made that Google has market power, and has to tread more carefully than other businesses when determining when its products can be used.
I suspect some of these are the EU overreaching whereas others Google could comply with relatively easily. Google can drop the search page and bundled software requirement, allowing manufacturers to license just Play Services and the Play Store, which would be enough as far as most end users are concerned.
The question is whether Google wants to fight what, to many of us, is a pointless war by both sides with some negative consequences when it comes to motivating private, profit seeking, businesses to contribute to free software.
You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
It's understandable. The Germans have made the same mistake a few times themselves.
Now three guesses as to who has contributed greatly to exactly that state of affairs.
People argue that the EU is less democratic than the UK, but really it's just larger. For example, there is an elected chamber full of directly elected MEPs (the European Parliament), two other bodies (the Commission and the Council) who are made up of people selected by our elected representatives. So it's kinda like the House of Commons and House of Lords, one elected and the other appointed by the elected representatives, except that the Lords has >800 members and the EU bodies have a total of 28 each.
So when we don't get our way, that isn't a failure of democracy. That's just being out-voted. Quitting won't change that, it just means we will never have any say or influence instead of only be out-voted sometimes.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
how much Apple is bribing EU members for this. Man, this is insane. Bloody idiots.
Delete the 'somewhat' from that last sentence and you are describing the United States Presidential Primary.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
I'm sure lots of private individuals, corporations, and independent banks suffered as the result of a crisis originally created by government policies.
I made no such claim. Are you off your meds and hallucinating again?
I remember this scare story from when we didn't join the Euro. Wrong then, wrong now.
Wrong, the EU has a free trade deal with Turkey without free movement. You are confusing the "single market" with free trade.
But outside the EU we won't have free movement with the EU so we can set the level and type of immigration as we see fit. Cyprus will veto Turkish membership of the EU anyway.
England might go, but Scotland is likely to take independence and remain/rejoin the EU in that case, as well as possibly Wales. So you will need a big carving knife to divvy the UK up with first.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I'm sure lots of private individuals, corporations, and independent banks suffered as the result of a crisis originally created by government policies.
Ah so you've resorted to moving the goalposts. Well played. *clap* *clap*.
I made no such claim. Are you off your meds and hallucinating again?
I was being facetiouis. Go reag my reply and revel in the comment that you ignored because you know I'm right and you can't answer it.
Basically you're a typical Euroskeptic, when you come across an inconvenient fact, you either ignore it or move the goalposts. And this is why I think the leave campaign is full of shit because it is nothing but deflection, lies and wishful thinking.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
This must be Apple's hypocritical doing. How come Apple hasn't been sued for monopolistic practices? When you buy apps or movies on iTunes (legally) you are have to spend money to repurchase them if you want to switch to Android. Also there is no way to re-sell apps that you bought once you are done with it.
I would like a button in Android that disables all Google applications and services, and halts any communication with Google servers.
That would be a wonderful new addition to Android. Sometimes the telemetry is just an uninvited guest.
This would conventionally be done with Cyanogenmod by omitting gapps post-install. There are two problems with that approach: a) fascist carriers with locked bootloaders, and b) a very high technical skillset that is not available to novice users.
A simple button to "cauterize google" would solve the problem nicely.
Europe could very well get such a thing, but I am unlikely to see it as I live in the U.S. where we are still waiting for the "right to be forgotten."
Europe/Russia, by all means, wedge this in. If Google balks, fork AOSP and ban sales of phones that include Google services. That would be quite an interesting fight.
The UK won't be able to make the rules stricter, and won't be able to veto countries like Turkey entering the EU, so EU immigration will increase.
What are you talking about? The UK is pro Turkey within the EU, as is David Cameron.
The UK don't want the EU to succeed, therefore getting Turkey in the EU is the best way to achieve that and to slow down EU integration.
Phone OSs are a two horse race (Android and iOS).
The issue really is with the app stores. It means whichever you pick you're locked into because your purchases aren't transferrable to the other store. Adding a 3rd option just increases that problem further because they will be no more compatible. If the EU should be looking at anything it should be that - some kind of data sharing or standardisation so that you can transfer your app purchases when you migrate device.
Be mediocre. If you are so good that you dominate the market, we will kill you.
Sincerely, the fascist communists in all places and at all times.
Once more from the rooftops:
The rules change when you become a monopoly.
Apple still play but they are a relatively niche provider in the worldwide scheme of things, so it's becoming fair to think of Android as a monopoly. You have to act deliberately carefully when everybody *has* to use you otherwise you will get regulated, and there's evidence of deliberate control of the market by Google.
Amazon apparently has no major issues taking Android and turning it into something entirely different, with their own interface and tools for their Fire line of products. Are these not available in the EU or somethin?
I remember this scare story from when we didn't join the Euro. Wrong then, wrong now.
Not really. London had to start handling Euros, and we had to accept all the EU financial rules to stay competitive. The difference here is that if we don't accept the financial rules we will be unable to sell many of our financial services to EU countries, and one of the stated goals of leaving is to ditch those rules.
For an example of what it will be like, look at Switzerland and Canada. Either the bankers will riot as they lose access to the EU market, or the people will riot as we accept all the EU rules they wanted to be free of.
Wrong, the EU has a free trade deal with Turkey without free movement. You are confusing the "single market" with free trade.
So does Canada. But it's not as free as trade between EU members. There are still some tariffs and they can't sell most financial services. The UK's financial sector is huge and does a great deal of business with the EU.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I bought a phone that has a flashlight built in, yet, I can not use the flashlight because there is no way to turn it on. There is no flashlight app preinstalled (nor a flashlight switch or button). The only way to use the flashlight on the phone I bought, is to create a google account , use the app store, and download a 3rd party app to use the flashlight.
This is totally unacceptable.
But I'm annoyed I can't install Debian on this computer in form of a cellphone.
I'm afraid you moved the goalposts. I said that government-run banks were involved in creating the crises. You then responded that private banks needed to be bailed out. Of course, you probably don't understand the difference between the two statements, understandable given your educational background.
Actually, I'm quite the atypical Euroskeptic, because I actually voted with my feet.
Frankly, whether the UK leaves or doesn't leave the EU makes little difference; Europe is so close, it will drag it down either way.
How? Just because nobody is competing? What's stopping them? Europe always has been a haven for bureaucrats. We could learn from this. Instead we build on it.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
I would hate EU look at Windows phone Edge browser or Cortana won't work without Bing. Android is the most open mobile OS out on the market.
If EU want to address the issue of Android just make all android phone rooted This way user is total control and don't have run into the problem of rooting can brick the phone, void the warranty of the phone, and prevent receiving future android update.
Already planning our move to Scotland!
(Fortunately we've got loads of friends there, which will make the move easier).
You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. - Blake
Isn't that oxymoron? and so is chanting Oracle should get $9B
Reminds me of the old movie "Americanthon". "England, our 57th state..."
Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
The surplus a monopoly can extract is limited by its market's barriers to entry (what makes it a monopoly). Many jurisdictions have deals with telcos to prevent competition, and healthcare costs are inflated by doctor medallions and drug patents. All the monopolies you just listed are explicitly government-created.
I'm sure someone is going to come along with some conspiracy and collusion theory as to why I'm wrong
I don't think much refutation is required for "Google is only doing the same sort of things that got Coke fined for monopoly abuse".
I remember this scare story from when we didn't join the Euro. Wrong then, wrong now.
Wrong, the EU has a free trade deal with Turkey without free movement. You are confusing the "single market" with free trade.
But outside the EU we won't have free movement with the EU so we can set the level and type of immigration as we see fit. Cyprus will veto Turkish membership of the EU anyway.
You say this but I work in investment banking and, along with others in my team, am currently being relocated from london to frankfurt. It may not happen quickly, but slowly and steadily banks can move their european operations to frankfurt. I know its a hell of a lot cheaper and i'm sure that if the uk leaves the EU will surely manage a couple of anti-london regulations to sweeten the pot.
It's worth considering that a lot of London's strength comes from its high concentration of skilled people in the city, hiring like for like in frankfurt is pretty much impossible (difficult in singapore also), but immigrating to London for high skilled non-EU nationals has become very difficult in the last 7 years (due to rules changes) and the property prices here have sky rocketed due to chronic under-building, add to that changes in dividends tax which make personal services companies less attractive (effectively lowering contractor rates in London vs higher taxing locations), and Germany's 3 year sweet-heart deal for foreign contractors and maybe all these things come together to make london a slightly less attractive a location. Albeit London is colossal a city its going to take a lot more than that to slow its momentum... but maybe say, leaving the EU? ugh i hate to think
It sure helps that Frankfurt's a much nicer city than London...but it can be, its tiny.
Also, the other half of my team are going to singapore, read into that what you will.
It would be nice if they also went after the (far worse) iOS in this regard, as they're far, far worse (and openly so). Being the smaller offender isn't a shield in a veritable duopoly.
If the UK left the EU it could end unrestricted immigration from the EU and increase high skilled immigration from outside the EU by reversing those rule changes. One of the problems of EU membership is that we have unrestricted immigration of low skilled workers (when we have unskilled UK citizens that could do those jobs) which increases demand for housing, driving up house prices.
[citation most definitely needed]
Canada does have some tariffs on trade with the EU, Turkey doesn't. I believe all European countries except Belarus have tariff free trade with the EU even if they are not in the EU itself.
I'm afraid you moved the goalposts. I said that government-run banks were involved in creating the crises.
Not in the UK because they were privately owned. We bailed out our own banks. So it's a completely irrelevant point.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
1. requiring manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Google's Chrome browser and requiring them to set Google Search as default search service on their devices, as a condition to license certain Google proprietary apps;
That's a good thing. It creates a uniform user experience. You are free to install other search and browsers, just don't make them default.
2. preventing manufacturers from selling smart mobile devices running on competing operating systems based on the Android open source code;
OK, that one is B.S.
3. giving financial incentives to manufacturers and mobile network operators on condition that they exclusively pre-install Google Search on their devices.
What's the harm there? Users are still able to install whatever they want.
How do they feel about developers not being able to put programs that compete with Apple built in apps onto the app store? Though I believe that's more lenient than it used to be. I'm still annoyed that I can't get Wifi Analyzer in iOS because it uses an undocumented API.
I refuse to sign
As a Canadian I would be happy with that arrangement :)
ah yes, that well known Microsoft/Oracle anti-Google shill...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
As for #2, hello, phones being sold running Cyanogen and others based on AOSP derivatives, but they don't have a big market share yet, or maybe ever.
It's not well explained in the summary, but one of the conditions when licensing the Play Store for inclusion in your Android phones is that you can't release phones with Android forks. I don't know the exact wording but you get the idea. So #2 is actually true, it's just not clearly explained in the summary
This may come as a complete surprise to you, but not all European banks are in the UK.
It's not hard to see. For example, the biggest Greek lender is Germany, which has a tightly regulated banking system that is half government owned. And these loans were often made for political reasons, that is, to support German exports, help German companies, and create German union jobs. The banks didn't worry much because they can simply socialize the cost; that is, the German tax payer ultimately foots the bill no matter what, since these banks are guaranteed not to fail. It's similar in other countries. I suggest you check the numbers and ownership relations yourself.
Why doesn't someone sue all of these assholes for wasting the Courts time?
So the banking crisis that began in the US with sub prime loans and credit default swaps was caused by German banks lending money to Greece? Let's try again. [Citation (not your conspiracy theories) needed]
This may come as a complete surprise to you, but not all European banks are in the UK.
And twisting and turning and moving the goalposts. Tell me, which government owned banks did the UK bail out?
SJW n. One who posts facts.
There are several crises: the US financial "crisis" and its worldwide consequences, and the Eurozone "crisis". In the context of EU discussions, I was assuming NotInHere was referring to the latter.
The Eurozone crisis was caused by irresponsible lending with in Europe due to European government interference; that is, European governments pressured lenders to make loans to risky countries in order to spur export. The US financial crisis was caused by irresponsible lending within the US due to US government interference; that is, the US government pressured lenders to make loans to high risk customers in order to get home ownership rates up and satisfy activists. In their own words.
If he was talking about the sovereign debt crisis then I'm sure he would have used the words sovereign and debt instead of banking. What he's clearly referring to is the financial crash that started in the US and the efforts of George Osborn to prevent a Europe-wide cap on bonuses to discourage the most insane forms of financial speculation. As to the causes of the financial crash, the left blames the banks, the right blames the government but as far as I can tell it was the fault of everyone involved, including those people who were stupid enough to take out a mortgage they couldn't repay.
I'm sure if he'd been talking about the sovereign debt crisis he would've used the words sovereign and debt instead of banking. What he's clearly referring to is the financial crash that started in the US and George Osborn's intervention to prevent the Europe-wide cap on banking bonuses which is seen as a way to discourage the worst insanities of the early 21st century.
As to the causes of the crash, the left blames the banks, the right blames the government but if you look at it, everyone involved was at fault: the banks creating their exotic financial instruments; the government first forcing banks to lend to those who couldn't afford to pay it back and then repealing the Glass Steagal Act; and the people who decided to have a mortgage when they had no hope of paying it back. In the case of the UK banks, they didn't have any legislation requiring them to lend to bad risks but they fell over themselves to do so anyway.
From what I can see, it was government deregulation that allowed the German (and French) banks to make riskier investments. French banks were privatised to that end. Again, it was the fault of everyone involved that this escalated.
I'm mystified as to why you think the UK bailed everyone out. As far as I know we were in for 7 billion under our obligations to the IMF. How much money do you think we've actually handed over, and do you have some evidence for this?
And if you go back, you'll see that my original statement was true whichever crisis he was referring to. You then asked for a citation and I gave one. Now I have given the other. What else do you need?
I don't see how you can fault them for that. Financial experts created these instruments, and financial experts bought them. Both buyers and sellers were using the same faulty economic theory. Regulators come from the same pool of financial experts and would have shared the same erroneous beliefs about risk.
When the French government bails out private banks to the tune of EU 360 bn, that's not deregulation or privatization, that is crony capitalism. The fault there is the bailout, not the banks. Without the bailout, the fools on either side of those investments would be bankrupt and wouldn't have been able to repeat this stupidity again, which I guarantee they are going to do.
Furthermore, in a free market, no bank is "too big to fail". The reason these banks are "too big to fail" is because of massive barriers to entry into the financial sector, and because governments themselves have built economic fictions and promises around our banking and financial institutions. That is, political promises rely on certain performance from the financial sector, and if the financial sector doesn't deliver, the government steps in and makes it appear that it did by filling the gaps with tax dollars.
I wasn't referring to the financial crisis per se but the EU budget. Without the large net contributions of the UK and Germany, the EU budget is in deep trouble.
You can't fault them for selling debts on and pretending that those debts would never have to be paid? You're either very forgiving of such dangerous stupidity or so wedded to the "free" market that you think that businesses that nearly brought down the world economy should be allowed to continue doing stupid stuff.
France paid more to the EU than we did last year and Italy weren't far behind either. It's not just us and Germany, and even if it was, our 12 billion Euros wouldn't keep Greece going for more than a couple of months so I've no idea where you're going with that one.
I agree that no bank should be too big to fail and I didn't agree with my government propping up private companies. There is a regulatory barrier to entry, but then banks have proven time and again that they can't be trusted with other people's money? What's your plan. No regulation at all? I'm sure that wouldn't result in anyone being robbed. In any case we don't exactly have a shortage of banks and building societies in the UK despite the barriers to entry. There are even new entrants into the financial sector. I've borrowed money twice from Zopa and there are new banks such as Atom and Metro.
The French privatised their publicly owned banks and deregulated the rest in 1987 and this led, as did the conversion of building societies to banks in the UK, to more reckless lending. It would be far better to force a break up of the bailed out banks to "avoid too big to fail" but that's communism apparently.
What citation did you provide to back up your European arguments? All I saw was a badly edited video talking about how the Democrats destroyed America.
There was no "pretense" involved; both buyers and sellers believed the risk estimates to be about right, otherwise they wouldn't have made the transaction. Furthermore, if the risk estimates were wrong, it was the responsibility of the buyers to discover that, not of the seller. After all, in all these transactions, both buyers and sellers were financial experts.
It wasn't the businesses that "brought down the world economy", it was governments, through careless investments, careless assumption of risk, and through bailouts. In a free market, none of this crap would have happened.
I'm sure some percentage of people would lose their money; stupid people who make unwise choices. Hopefully, they would learn from that. Right now, stupid people can make unwise choices and people who make good choices have to bail them out, over and over again. That's wrong.
No doubt it did. Privatization of public assets is an intrinsically corrupt process, and privatization and deregulation usually are incomplete and don't result in a free market, but a crony capitalist system. That is, once you have nationalized banks and industries, getting back to a free market is extremely hard. That's not a fault of free markets.
This follows from the tightly regulated European banking sector, its high degree of public ownership in countries like Germany, and the exposure of public and government-regulated pension funds, which are the norm in European countries. That is, most of the people who bought and sold this debt were all under government control. You can verify that for yourself for the countries of your choice.
If you think that was "badly edited" you don't understand how outrageous the statements by those Democrats were, and how corrupt people like Raines were.
> Let them have Bing
So Bing = brioche? And Brin = Marie Antoinette, or what?