EU slams Google: Search data must be shared with competitors, Android must allow other AI services
The European Commission has issued two binding designation measures to Google under the Digital Markets Act (DMA). These decisions requires the advertising giant to open both its Android operating system and its search data to competitors during 2027.
The Commission's goal is to ensure that alternative AI services and search engines can compete on equal terms with Google's own services, such as Gemini and Google Search.
Recently, Google's top security management warned that EU regulation could expose everyone's search histories to hackers and undermine phone security. According to Google, its own researchers managed to break the anonymization planned by EU decision-makers in less than two hours.
However, the Commission assures in its recent decision that the new measures include robust safeguards to protect user privacy and device integrity.
The first of the changes mandated by the Commission concerns AI services on Android devices, which are set to open up to competition in July 2027. Currently, AI assistants from other companies have only limited access to the operating system's core functions, while Google's own Gemini assistant has full rights.

OnePlus' discontinuation in Europe has been obvious for quite some time. The company's phones have gradually disappeared from retailers' stocks, and new models have no longer been delivered to Europe at all - neither for sale nor for reviews.
Elon Musk's AI-space-social media company SpaceXAI also has an AI tool developed to assist programmers.



