Alibaba: Google forced Acer to drop our new mobile OS
Screenshot by Nicole Cozma/CNET
Google is allegedly playing hardball with its Android partners.
The company forced Acer to drop its support of Alibaba's new mobile operating system, Aliyun, threatening to pull its Android-related cooperation and support if Acer didn't, according to a report from the Dow Jones Newswires.
Acer was originally scheduled to hold a press conference today to show off a smartphone running on Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba's Aliyun platform, but it cancelled the event. Acer told Dow Jones that it will continue to talk with Google and hopes to still use Aliyun.
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Alibaba told CNET that Acer was notified by Google that it would cease their partnership if Acer supported Aliyun.
"Our partner was notified by Google that if the product runs Aliyun OS, Google will terminate its Android-related cooperation and other technology licensing with our partner," according to a statement e-mailed to CNET. "We respect and understand our partner's decision to postpone the introduction of the phone, and are dismayed by the impact this dispute has had on our partner."
CNET has contacted Google and Acer for comment. We'll update the story when we get a response.
Google's Android operating system already dominates the market, and the company apparently wants to keep it that way. Alibaba is seen as China's version of Google, so it makes sense that Alibaba would want to emulate the strategy of creating its own mobile operating system.
Acer, a Taiwanese manufacturer of phones and PCs, was a logical choice to sign on to support the platform. Acer had said that the phone would go on sale in China on Friday.
If Alibaba's claim is true, the fact that Google would go to such lengths to stamp out a potential rival would speak to the intensity of the competitive smartphone environment. It would also illustrate the influence Google holds in the mobile industry and with its players.
Updated at 11:41 a.m. PT: to include a statement from Alibaba.
This article originally appeared on CNET.
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Free market my a$$...
When the major players act like this, how can one support the system? Big business hates workers, as individuals or as competition (regardless of size). Anyone who says there's an anti-business sentiment forgets it's due to the anti-worker antics of the large businesses... NOT due to any of the excuses they claim. (I could spend an hour citing pinpoint, focused detail, but I've learned by their previous reactions they're too brainwashed by their koolaid... that includes the rightwing morning show DJ that, half the time, acts as if he's figured things out... until the next day when he goes back to his usual 1`D rhetoric... one day, one day, he'll finally figure it out...)