Epic Games sues Google, Samsung claiming anti-competitive collusion
Epic Games has filed a lawsuit against Google and Samsung, alleging the two companies colluded to hinder third-party app downloads on Samsung devices. The lawsuit claims Samsung's default "Auto Blocker" feature was designed in coordination with Google to reinforce its app distribution monopoly and complicate access to alternative app stores.
- Tech
- DPA
- Published Date: 03:16 | 30 September 2024
- Modified Date: 03:26 | 30 September 2024
The maker of Fortnite is filing a lawsuit in the U.S. against Google and Samsung, accusing the two firms of "colluding" to make it harder for third-party apps to be downloaded on their platforms.
Epic Games has accused Google of pushing Samsung – which runs Google's Android operating system on its phones – into making it harder for users to download apps from places which are not Google or Samsung's own app stores.
In its lawsuit, Epic alleges that Samsung's recent switch to make a feature called Auto Blocker – a tool which stops users from installing apps from third party sources – on by default was "intentionally crafted" by Google and Samsung to create more friction for users when they try to download apps from alternate app stores.
The Fortnite maker argues that Google has been trying to "pre-emptively undermine" a previous ruling made in U.S. court, which found the tech giant had created an "illegal monopoly" in how it operated app distribution on Android, giving its own Google Play Store prominence and limiting access for other, third party app stores.
In a blog post announcing the lawsuit, Epic Games said: "We are filing a court case against Google and Samsung over coordinated efforts to block competition in app distribution on Samsung devices with Samsung's default-on Auto Blocker feature.
"Auto Blocker is the latest in a long series of dealings in which Google and Samsung have agreed not to compete to protect Google's monopoly power.
"Auto Blocker cements the Google Play Store as the only viable way to get apps on Samsung devices, blocking every other store from competing on a level playing field.
"Our litigation alleges that Samsung's recent implementation of the Auto Blocker feature was intentionally crafted in coordination with Google to pre-emptively undermine the US District Court's remedy following the jury's verdict in Epic's case against Google."
The game developer has been fighting big tech firms for years over anti-competitive behaviour on their app stores, and only recently returned to both Android and Apple's iOS platform in Europe after new EU rules forced the firm's to loosen their controls on third-party app stores, allowing Epic to launch its own the Epic Games Store on their platforms.
Speaking to reporters about the lawsuit, Epic Games chief executive Tim Sweeney said the company was concerned that Google was looking to get around any potential restrictions placed upon it to open up its platform, by encouraging phone makers and others that rely on the Android operating system but not subject to the same rulings, to implement the alleged anti-competitive processes instead.
"The timing of this is really disconcerting," he said.
"Epic went through major antitrust litigation at a jury trial at the end of last year – we won the jury trial on all counts.
"A fear we've had all along is that Google would take many of the illegal practices that they're doing and convince carriers and OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) to do them instead."
Sweeney said since Samsung had made the switch to make the Auto Blocker feature on by default, it had created a 21 step process that users now needed to go through to download the Epic Games Store and access Fortnite.
He also accused the two companies of "misleading" users through their labelling of the Epic Games Store download file as "unknown" when users attempt to install it, arguing that the games developer has had a long-standing relationship with both companies and is not an unknown or unverified source.