Categories: Business

Google Fined $36 Million Over Secret Telco Deals In Australia: What It Means For Android Users Worldwide

Google has decided to pay a US$35.8 million penalty after Australia's competition regulator found the tech giant hit anti-competitive contracts with the country’s two key telecommunications providers. This fine enhances to a series of legal challenges Google faced not only in Australia but in other parts of the world as well.

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Published by Ankur Mishra
Published: August 18, 2025 17:26:59 IST

Google has decided to pay a US$35.8 million penalty after Australia’s competition regulator found the tech giant hit anti-competitive contracts with the country’s two key telecommunications providers.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said on Monday that Google paid Telstra and Optus to pre-install its search engine on Android devices between 2019 and 2021, therefore, restricting it for other search engines.

The ACCC decided that these agreements harmed competition by tumbling consumer choice and stifling innovation in mobile search services. Google acknowledged its conduct had a considerable effect on the market and confirmed it no longer enters into such agreements.

The proposed penalty, jointly submitted by Google and the ACCC, is now expecting approval from the Federal Court. If accepted by the court, it will mark one of the largest fines for anti-competitive conduct in Australia’s digital economy segment.

Implications for Global Android Market

Though the arrangements were precise to the Australian market, the case raises broader questions about how search engines are globally distributed on Android. Google, which owns Android, said it has since restructured its policies and no longer includes such requirements in its commercial contracts.

Both Telstra and Optus confirmed they have not entered into any parallel deals with Google since 2024. They also have cooperated fully with the investigation.

Legal Setbacks Continue for Google in Australia

This fine enhances to a series of legal challenges Google faced not only in Australia but in other parts of the world as well. Just last week, a federal court mainly sided against the company in a lawsuit from Fortnite maker Epic Games over limitations on other app stores. YouTube, also owned by Google, was recently included in Australia’s under-16 social media restrictions.

Also Read: Google To Build Asia’s Largest Data Centre In Visakhapatnam As Andhra Pradesh Secures $7.9 Billion Tech Investment

Published by Ankur Mishra
Published: August 18, 2025 17:26:59 IST

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