The European Commission (EC) issues legally binding decisions under the EU’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) requiring Google to improve interoperability on Android for rival AI assistants. The EC orders Google to provide third-party AI services the same access to specific device and platform features that are currently available to Google’s Gemini. The intent is to ensure that users can set competing AI assistants as defaults and still use a similar range of capabilities.
The EC also requires Google to enable third-party services to perform actions across apps and support long-running tasks, and to allow access to relevant context from applications and device sensors for more proactive assistance. It also demands that third-party AI services receive sufficient computing resources, including access to on-device AI models where required, to carry out tasks.
Google is given a deadline to implement changes over a timeline that includes broad compliance by August 1, 2027, with the EC granting a full year for Google to make the required updates. Google says the requirements risk weakening privacy and security protections. The EC’s action follows similar DMA enforcement against Apple regarding AI assistant interoperability in the EU, where Siri access is also affected by regulatory requirements.