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Google Hit with Massive Fine in Australia After Crushing Legal Defeats—Tech Giant’s Worst Week Yet?

Google Hit with Massive Fine in Australia After Crushing Legal Defeats—Tech Giant’s Worst Week Yet?

Published:
2025-08-18 12:15:00
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Google slapped with major fine after back-to-back legal losses in Australia

Australia just made Google pay up—big time. Back-to-back courtroom losses have slammed the tech titan with one of its heaviest penalties ever. No mercy from the regulators.

Legal knockout punch lands

Two strikes and you're out. Google's legal team fumbled consecutive cases Down Under, triggering a financial avalanche. The fine? Let's just say it'd make even a crypto bull wince at the burn rate.

Regulators play hardball

Australian watchdogs aren't playing nice with Silicon Valley anymore. This verdict sends a clear message: break our rules, pay the price. Meanwhile, Google's CFO is probably recalculating that 'risk assessment' spreadsheet right about now.

Tech meets finance irony

Funny how these 'too-big-to-fail' tech giants suddenly remember what compliance means when the fines start looking like Series C funding rounds. Maybe they should've tokenized their legal defense.

Google admits unfair practices

Google acknowledged the setup had a substantial effect on rival search engines and said it has stopped entering such agreements.

It also accepted the A$55 million penalty, the ACCC said. “Today’s outcome … created the potential for millions of Australians to have greater search choice in the future, and for competing search providers to gain meaningful exposure to Australian consumers,” ACCC Chair Gina-Cass Gottlieb said.

The ACCC and Google jointly asked the Federal Court to impose the A$55 million fine. The regulator added that the court still needs to rule on the appropriateness of the amount, but that working with the tech giant avoided protracted litigation.

A Google spokesperson said the company was pleased to resolve the ACCC’s concerns, which involved “provisions that haven’t been in our commercial agreements for some time”.

The spokesperson added: “We are committed to providing Android device makers more flexibility to pre-load browsers and search apps, while preserving the offerings and features that help them innovate, compete with Apple, and keep costs low.”

A Telstra spokesperson pointed Reuters to an earlier statement saying Telstra and Optus, which is owned by Singapore Telecommunications, cooperated fully with the ACCC and have pledged not to enter agreements with Google to pre-install its search product since 2024.

The penalty arrives after a difficult week for the Alphabet unit

Days earlier, a court largely sided with Fortnite Maker Epic Games in a case alleging that Google and Apple blocked competing app stores on their mobile platforms.

That lawsuit is part of Epic’s long-running push against leading smartphone companies in several markets. According to reports on the Australian decision, the Federal Court concluded the phone makers’ app stores lacked safeguards to prevent anti-competitive conduct.

Epic argued Apple and Google set download fees for its games too high and prevented users from installing Epic’s alternative app store.

The Australian ruling, which spans 2,000 pages, was not made public, but media said a judge’s summary indicated the companies did not intentionally violate the law.

In a post on X, Epic said the Australian court “just found that Apple and Google abuse their control over app distribution and in-app payments to limit competition”.

Cryptopolitan reported last month, YouTube was added to a nationwide rule restricting social media services for people under 16, reversing an earlier decision that had left the video site out of the ban.

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