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reuters+1wikipedia+1globalbankingandfinance+1The European Union's highest court on Thursday dismissed Google's Alphabet Inc. final appeal against a €4.1 billion ($4.7 billion) antitrust fine, ending an eight-year legal battle over the tech giant's use of its Android operating system to stifle competition and entrench its dominance in search.
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that Google and parent company Alphabet abused a dominant market position by leveraging Android to unfairly promote its own services. "The appeal brought by Google and its parent company Alphabet against the judgment of the General Court is dismissed, thereby confirming the penalty imposed for Google Search's abuse of a dominant position in the context of the Android operating system," the Luxembourg-based court said.reuters+2
The decision is legally binding with no further avenue of appeal, marking a definitive victory for EU competition enforcers and one of the largest antitrust penalties ever levied against a single company.dw+1
The European Commission originally fined Google €4.34 billion in July 2018, finding the company had violated EU antitrust rules through three practices: requiring device manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Chrome as a condition for licensing the Play Store; paying manufacturers and mobile operators to exclusively pre-install Google Search; and preventing manufacturers from selling devices running competing versions of Android. Google challenged the decision, and in September 2022 the General Court largely upheld the ruling but reduced the fine to €4.125 billion.wikipedia+2
The ruling arrives as EU regulators continue an aggressive posture toward major technology companies. The Commission fined Google an additional €2.95 billion in September 2025 over anti-competitive practices in advertising technology, bringing the company's total EU antitrust penalties to more than €8 billion across multiple cases.reuters
Thursday's decision is expected to reinforce the EU's broader regulatory framework, including the Digital Markets Act, which imposes obligations on dominant platforms. According to Reuters, the ruling is "likely to boost Europe's crackdown on Big Tech".globalbankingandfinance+1