The European Commission officially ordered Google on Monday, April 27, 2026, to open the Android operating system to competing AI services. This move, part of a “specification proceeding” under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), aims to break Google’s perceived monopoly on system-level AI integration.
The EU’s preliminary findings suggest that Google currently reserves the most critical Android capabilities for its own AI, specifically Gemini, leaving rivals at a significant functional disadvantage.
1. The EU’s Core Demands
The draft measures require Google to ensure that third-party AI assistants can “effectively interact” with the Android ecosystem on equal terms. Key requirements include:
- Deep Integration: Competing AI must be able to execute tasks across apps, such as sending emails through the user’s preferred client, placing delivery orders, or sharing photos with contacts.
- Custom Wake Words: Users must be able to trigger a third-party AI assistant using its own specific “wake word” (e.g., “Hey Claude” or “Hey DeepSeek”) rather than being funneled through “Hey Google.”
- System Entry Points: Rival AI services must have access to system-level triggers, including long-press home button actions or navigation handle gestures.
- Contextual Awareness: Google must provide competing services with access to on-screen data (e.g., for real-time translation or summaries) and necessary hardware resources to ensure they remain responsive.
2. Google’s Defense: Privacy & Security
Google has pushed back against the ruling, citing significant risks to the user experience and device integrity.
- Autonomy: Google’s senior competition counsel, Clare Kelly, argued that device makers already have “full autonomy” to integrate the AI they want.
- Security Risk: Google contends that mandating access to sensitive hardware and deep device permissions would undermine critical privacy and security protections for European users.
- Cost Impact: The company warned that these “unwarranted interventions” would unnecessarily drive up the cost of devices for consumers.
3. Timeline & Consequences
This is not yet a final ruling, but rather a formal set of “preliminary findings” that initiates a strict legal countdown.
- Public Consultation: Interested parties (including rival AI companies and hardware manufacturers) have until May 13, 2026, to submit feedback on the proposed measures.
- Final Binding Decision: The European Commission must adopt its final, legally binding decision within six months of the proceeding’s opening (by approximately July 2026).
- Potential Fines: If Google fails to comply with the final binding measures, it could face massive fines of up to 10% of its annual worldwide turnover, or 20% for repeated infringements.
