The European Commission has finally called time on Google’s cozy little setup where Gemini gets royal treatment on every Android phone. After months of investigation under the Digital Markets Act, regulators have formally proposed that Google must level the playing field. The EU says Android’s system-level privileges give Gemini an unfair leg up over competitors like ChatGPT or Grok, effectively locking users into Google’s ecosystem whether they like it or not. Henna Virkkunen, the Commission’s VP for Tech Sovereignty, put it bluntly: interoperability is the key to unlocking AI’s potential. Translation: stop rigging the game.
The Takedown: Why Gemini’s Special Treatment Has to Go
Google can whine about ‘unwarranted intervention’ as much as it wants, but the evidence is damning. The Commission has documented specific scenarios where only Gemini can perform basic tasks like sending emails or sharing photos through system-level integration. Third party AI apps are treated like second class citizens, locked out from critical features like screen context, hardware access, and local AI model execution. The proposed remedies are a gut punch to Google’s walled garden: mandatory APIs for system wide hot word invocation, unrestricted screen context access for rival AIs, and the ability for third parties to run local models with full performance. No more excuses, no more gatekeeping.
The Clock is Ticking on Google’s AI Monopoly
Here’s where it gets real. Public feedback closes May 13, and a final decision lands by July 27. If Google drags its feet, the DMA allows fines up to 10% of annual global revenue, pocket change for Alphabet but a serious message. Google’s senior competition counsel Claire Kelly is already spinning the privacy and security angle, claiming this mandate would expose sensitive hardware and permissions. That’s rich coming from a company that vacuumed up your location data for years. The bottom line: Europe is forcing genuine competition in mobile AI, and the rest of the world should be watching closely. No related CVEs.
Source: Arstechnica
