by  Chloe Albanesius

Google on Friday denied that it is blocking VoIP services like Skype
on Android devices, and said that full-featured VoIP apps are not
available on Android phones only because developers have not yet
created them.

The statement came after USA Today published an article that said
Google does not allow a full Skype VoIP app on Android devices. The
paper accused Google of blaming T-Mobile, which provides service for
Android phones, for blocking Skype and only allowing Skype Lite, a
version of the service that runs over traditional phone networks, not
the Web.

T-Mobile told USA Today that it did not ask Google to block VoIP services.

At this point, Google does not have a full-featured version of Skype
for Android handsets, but Google said Friday that this was not because
the search engine giant had blocked VoIP apps.

"While the first generation of our Android software did not support
full-featured VoIP applications due to technology limitations, we have
worked through those limitations in subsequent versions of Android,
and developers are now able to build and upload VoIP services," Andy
Rubin, vice president of mobile platforms at Google, wrote in a blog
post.

USA Today, however, is "wrong" to suggest that Google blamed T-Mobile
for the lack of a full Skype app on Android, Rubin said.

"As we told USA Today earlier in the week Google did not reject an
application from Skype or from any other company that provides VoIP
services," he wrote. "To suggest otherwise is false."

Why are there no complete VoIP apps for Android? No one has created
one, Rubin said.

"At this point no software developer – including Skype – has
implemented a complete VoIP application for Android," he said. "But
we're excited to see – and use – these applications when they're
submitted, because they often provide more choice and options for
users."

Rubin closed by saying that Google looks forward to when consumers
"can access any applications, including VoIP apps, from any devices,
on any networks."

Skype confirmed that it developed Skype Lite because Android did not
support a full-featured version of the VoIP service.
"It is our point of view that consumers benefit most when software
companies such as Skype, operating systems such as Android, and
wireless operators collaborate to deliver a complete mobile Internet
experience," a Skype spokesman said in an e-mail.

"Today in the Android Market there are Skype and other VoIP-related
applications available for download by T-Mobile customers with
Android-based handsets," T-Mobile said in a statement.

Friday is also the deadline for Google, AT&T, and Apple to submit
their responses to an Federal Communications Commission inquiry
surrounding Google Voice. Late last month, the FCC penned letters to
the three companies requesting detailed information about why Apple
blocked several Google Voice-related apps from the iPhone as well as
data about the companies' roles in approving apps.

Those filings are expected to be made public this afternoon. Check
back later on PCMag.com for all the details. (UPDATE: Story now
available).

Additional reporting by Sascha Segan

Editor's Note: This story was updated at 3:45 pm Eastern time with
comment from T-Mobile.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2351887,00.asp

-- 
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