By Jonathan Stempel
April 14 (Reuters) – A new antitrust lawsuit on Tuesday accuses Google of shutting out rival Android app stores by โmonopolizing app distribution and billing, violating U.S. antitrust law.
Aptoide, a โPortuguese company that specializes in mobile games and calls itself the world’s third-largest Android app store, โsaid it would have exerted substantially more pressure on Google’s pricing and policies but for Google’s “anticompetitive chokehold” that shuts out smaller rivals.
Google, a unit of Alphabet, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Based in Lisbon, Aptoide brands โitself “the alternative Android app โ store,” with about 436,000 apps in its catalog and more than 200 million annual users by 2024.
It said it โ offers lower commissions to developers and lower costs to users, yet suffers from irreparable harm because Google deprives rivals of exclusive content from top developers, โand steers โdevelopers to Google Play and other “must โhave” services.
The lawsuit filed in โSan Francisco federal court seeks an injunction against alleged anticompetitive practices, plus unspecified triple damages. Aptoide filed a separate complaint against Google with European Union antitrust authorities in 2014.
Last November, Google agreed to make Android and app store changes to settle a five-year-old antitrust case by Epic Games, maker of โthe popular Fortnite video game.
A jury found โin 2023 that Google unlawfully stifled competition, โand the trial judge ordered โsweeping reforms the following year.
Google has also defended against โa U.S. government case in which โa judge in โAugust 2024 found its internet search engine an illegal monopoly.
The judge later ordered the Mountain View, California-based company to share search data โwith rivals, but did โnot require a sale of its Android operating system or Chrome โbrowser. Google and the government appealed.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in โNew York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)