Google tightening control of Android, insisting licensees abide by 
'non-fragmentation clauses'?

By Vlad Savov  posted Mar 31st 2011 5:12AM

http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/31/google-tightening-control-of-android-insisting-licensees-abide/

A storm seems to be brewing over the realm of Android development. Bloomberg's 
Businessweek spies have received word from "a dozen executives working at key 
companies in the Android ecosystem" that Google is actively working to gain 
control and final say over customizations of its popular mobile OS. That might 
not sound unreasonable, and indeed Google's public position on the matter is 
that it's seeking to stabilize the platform and ensure quality control, but it 
does mark a major shift from where Android started -- an open source OS that 
was also open to manufacturers and carriers to customize as they wish. Not so 
anymore, we're told, as apparently Mountain View is now demanding that content 
partnerships and OS tweaks get the blessing of Andy Rubin before proceeding. 
The alternative, of course, is to not be inside Google's warm and fuzzy early 
access program, but then, as evidenced by the company recently withholding the 
Honeycomb source code, you end up far behind those amo
 ng your competitors who do dance to Google's pipe.

Things have gotten so heated, in fact, that complaints have apparently been 
made to the US Department of Justice. They may have something to do with 
allegations of Google holding back Verizon handsets with Microsoft's Bing on 
board, ostensibly in an effort to trip up its biggest search competitor. 
Another major dissatisfaction expressed by those working with Android code is 
that Google needs an advance preview of what is being done in order to give it 
the green light -- which, as noted by a pair of sources familiar with 
Facebook's Android customization efforts, isn't sitting well with people at 
all. Google and Facebook are direct competitors in the online space and it's 
easily apparent how much one stands to gain from knowing the other's plans 
early. As to the non-fragmentation clauses in licenses, Andy Rubin has pointed 
out those have been there from the start, but it's only now that Google is 
really seeking to use them to establish control. The future of Android, 
therefore,
  looks to be a little less open and a little more Googlish -- for better or 
worse. As Nokia's Stephen Elop puts it:

"The premise of a true open software platform may be where Android st
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