A US court case could have far-reaching effects on everybody's Android phones. The case, Epic v Google, has ended with a judge stating that Google's Android app store is an "illegal monopoly", and that it must open it up for competition for a three year period.
Google doesn't have to make the changes immediately; it's got a few months. And this is a US court, so Google may take a different approach in other countries. But, this could be one of the most significant shake-ups in Android's history and it's going to have a huge effect on how people get their Android apps.
Judge James Donato has ruled that the way Google runs the Play app store is anti-competitive and that the firm illegally tied its payment system to the app store.
Now, Google must stop demanding developers use Google Play Billing for their apps; must let developers tell customers about alternative payment methods; and must let Android developers link to downloads outside the Play store.
Not only that, but Google must now include third-party app stores in the Play Store itself. It must also give those app stores full access to the entire catalogue of Google Play apps unless developers choose not to be included.