Google Faces Swiss Probe After Removing Android Search Choice Screen
Google Faces Swiss Probe After Removing Android Search Choice Screen
https://eutoday.net/google-swiss-probe-android-search-choice-screen/
Publish Date: 2026-07-14 09:56:00
Source Domain: eutoday.net
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Switzerland’s competition authority has opened a preliminary probe after Google removed an Android search-choice screen that remains available in the European Economic Area.
Switzerland’s competition authority has opened a preliminary investigation into Google after the company removed the Android search-engine choice screen for Swiss users, creating a test of how far European-style digital competition protections extend outside the EU’s regulatory perimeter.
The issue is the removal in Switzerland of a choice screen that allows users setting up Android devices to select a search engine rather than accepting Google Search as the default.
The distinction matters because the choice screen remains available inside the European Economic Area under EU competition and Digital Markets Act pressure. Switzerland is deeply integrated with European digital markets but is not an EU member. Google’s decision therefore appears to draw a regulatory border around a pro-competition feature.
Default settings are powerful in search. Most users do not change them after setup, and smaller search providers depend on visibility at the moment a device is activated. A choice screen is not a perfect solution, but it gives rivals a chance to reach users before habits and defaults lock in.
The Swiss case also shows how technology companies can differentiate between EU and non-EU European users. Where the DMA applies, gatekeepers face direct obligations. Where it does not, regulators may need to rely on national competition law, which can be slower and less prescriptive.
EU Today has previously covered major European technology cases, including Android-related antitrust disputes and Digital Markets Act challenges. The Swiss probe adds a neighbouring-state angle: what happens when a platform keeps a remedy where EU law requires it, but withdraws the same remedy just outside that perimeter?
For smaller search engines, the concern is market access. If Google controls the operating…