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Yandex has asked Russia’s competition watchdog to investigate whether Google is abusing the dominance of its Android mobile operating system, as the Russian firm’s share of the search market fell below 60 percent amid competition on mobile devices.
The case mirrors a probe in Europe centered on whether Google takes unfair advantage of the 80 percent market share of the Android platform to promote services from maps to search.
Yandex said on Wednesday that device manufacturers were increasingly blocked from installing services from Google’s competitors on their devices.
“We believe that device manufacturers should have a choice as to which search provider to set as the default or which services to have pre-installed on the device. … We are talking about the need to unbundle Google’s Android operating system from Google Search and its other end-user services,” it said.
The watchdog, the Russian Federal Antimonopoly Service, said it had received Yandex’s complaint. A spokeswoman said it could take up to 30 days to review it, but it also could be faster as the agency has been following the case in Europe.
The press service for Google’s office in Russia said it would not comment as it had not seen the complaint.
“As for the Android platform we can say that users always have the choice of which applications and services to use on Android devices,” the press service said in an emailed comment.
Yandex’s claims came as its quarterly share of the Russian search market fell below 60 percent for the first time since 2010. According to LiveInternet, Yandex’s share, including mobile, averaged 59.7 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with 60.3 percent a quarter earlier.
Yandex also said it expected year-on-year revenue growth to slow to about 15 percent in the first quarter, adding its outlook was limited to quarterly guidance because of a high level of uncertainty over the economy.
Fourth-quarter revenue rose 21 percent to 14.7 billion rubles ($235.4 million)
Net income jumped 126 percent from a year earlier to 7.6 billion rubles, boosted by a 4.7-billion-ruble foreign exchange gain.
Adjusted net income grew 13 percent to around 4.0 billion rubles, while earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) increased 18 percent to 6.1 billion rubles, it said in a statement.
(Editing by Lidia Kelly and Mark Potter)
This article originally appeared on Recode.net.