South Korea Investigating Google For Anti-Competitive Behavior

by ,   ,   July 21, 2016

Google has been a regular target of the EU’s antitrust regulator.

South Korea’s antitrust regulator inspected Google’s Seoul headquarters to investigate whether the firm is engaged in anticompetitive behavior over its Android operating system, the Yonhap News Agency reported on Thursday.

Yonhap, citing unnamed sources, said the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) made the inspection last week and was probing whether Alphabet’s Google forced smartphone makers using Android on their devices to not sell products using other operating systems.

Regulators began looking into the matter after the European Union brought charges against Google for anticompetitive behavior earlier this year.

 

A week ago, Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s competition commissioner, announced antitrust charges against Google for the third time since 2015, accusing the company’s advertising products of restricting consumer choice.

A person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters the KFTC conducted an on-site inspection at Google’s South Korean headquarters but declined to elaborate further. Google and the KFTC declined to comment.

 

South Korea’s antitrust regulator has investigated Google before. In 2013, the KFTC cleared Google of wrongdoing after a two-year investigation on whether the company hurt competition by forcing smartphone makers using Android to pre-load its search engine on the handsets.

 

Fortune, Thursday, July 21, 2016

 

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