
YouTube to Be Included in Australia's Teen Social Media Ban
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Communications Minister Anika Wells are set to confirm the decision on Wednesday, the Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported. The ban is due to come into force at the end of 2025.

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Android Authority
an hour ago
- Android Authority
The clock is ticking: Google has 14 days to make major changes to the Play Store
Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority TL;DR Google has 14 days to enact the Play Store changes needed to resolve its antitrust issues. The tech giant has now filed an emergency stay with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The company believes that making these changes in such a short amount of time will put users and developers at risk. On Thursday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the ruling from the original Epic v. Google lawsuit, giving Epic Games the big win it was looking for. As a result, Google must enact a list of remedies to resolve its antitrust issues. The tech giant is now hoping the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals will grant it an emergency stay. According to The Verge, Google has revealed that it has only 14 days to enact the significant changes it was ordered to make to the Play Store. The quick turnaround has led the tech giant to file an emergency stay with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to put a pause on the situation. The list of remedies that will need to be enacted in 14 days includes: Allowing app developers to use non-Google payment methods Allowing developers to tell users about other ways to pay from within the Play Store Letting developers share links with users that allow their apps to be downloaded outside of the Play Store Letting developers set their own prices No more paying phone makers, carriers, and developers for Play Store exclusivity or preinstallation Working with Epic to resolve any disputes as Google builds a system to let rival app stores in Eventually, Google will also have to allow rival app stores on the Play Store or give these rivals access to its full app catalog. However, Google won't be forced to do that quite yet. As the outlet points out, Google still has seven and a half months before it will be required to let other apps onto the Play Store. So, although Epic CEO Tim Sweeney said the Epic Games Store is coming to the Play Store, that won't happen until at least next year. In the stay request, Google argues that this qualifies as an emergency because making these changes will significantly impact millions of users, hundreds of thousands of developers, and its own company. It also claims that enacting such changes in a short span of time will expose users and developers to substantial risks, as well as jeopardize the Android ecosystem. Whether the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals grants Google's request for a stay remains to be seen. But considering Google was denied an earlier request for a stay, it seems unlikely. It's expected that Google could try to appeal to the Supreme Court. Follow


The Verge
an hour ago
- The Verge
Google just got a minimum one-week emergency stay before it has to change Android app store policy.
Google LLC ('Google') has filed an emergency motion for an administrative stay of the district court's permanent injunction, entered October 7, 2024, pending Google's forthcoming motion to stay the injunction pending further appellate proceedings. Google's emergency motion (Dkt. Entry No. 201) is granted. Google should file its motion to stay the injunction pending further appellate proceedings no later than August 8, 2025.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Microsoft rebuked by UK regulators as cloud revenues soar
This story was originally published on CIO Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily CIO Dive newsletter. Dive Brief: Microsoft received a stern rebuke from the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority Thursday after a banner year for its cloud division. Azure cloud services revenue increased 34% year over year to more than $75 billion in the 12 months ending June 30, Microsoft Chairman and CEO Satya Nadella said in the company's Q4 2025 earnings release. Competition in the UK cloud market is 'not working well,' the CMA said in its final decision, which singled out Microsoft's software licensing practices for 'adversely impacting the competitiveness of AWS and Google in the supply of cloud services.' The market watchdog recommended actions that would 'impose targeted and bespoke interventions' to remedy the situation. Microsoft reiterated objections raised in a February response to the investigation. 'The CMA Panel's most recent publication misses the mark again, ignoring that the cloud market has never been so dynamic and competitive, with record investment, and rapid, AI-driven changes,' the company said in an email. 'Microsoft looks forward to working with the Digital Markets Unit toward an outcome that more accurately reflects the current competition in cloud.' Dive Insight: Microsoft is one of three U.S. cloud superpowers that together dominate nearly two-thirds of the global market for infrastructure services. AWS leads with 29% of the market, followed by Microsoft and Google Cloud, whose shares are 22% and 12% respectively, according to Synergy Research Group May analysis. In Europe, the trio's combined footprint is even larger proportionally, swallowing up 70% of the region's $70 billion in cloud spend last year, Synergy Research Group data show. Europe-based providers saw their collective share contract from 29% in 2017 to its current level of 15% in 2022, the analyst firm said in a July report. A surge in demand for cloud services, driven by AI adoption and ongoing workload migrations, sparked a hyperscaler building boom that has yet to subside. Microsoft alone committed $80 billion to capital investments in its 2025 fiscal year and spent $24.2 billion during the final quarter, which included more than $17 billion on property, plants and equipment, EVP and CFO Amy Hood said Wednesday. The company expects CapEx to exceed $30 billion in the next quarter to satisfy escalating demand. 'Even as we continue bringing more datacenter capacity online, we currently expect to remain capacity constrained through the first half of our fiscal year,' Hood said. 'We have $368 billion of contracted backlog we need to deliver, not just across Azure, but across the breadth of the Microsoft Cloud.' Azure's growth spurt helped the cloud unit deliver more than one-quarter of Microsoft's $281 billion in revenue for the 2025 fiscal year. Intelligent Cloud, the larger division encompassing Azure, accounted for $106 billion or over one-third of the company's revenue for the 12-month period. Large customers helped drive Azure's expansions, Nadella said, pointing to food and beverage behemoth Nestlé, which shuttered six aging data centers through a massive migration of over 200 SAP instances and 10,000-plus servers. Microsoft 365 Copilot, the generative AI chatbot embedded in the company's cloud-based office productivity suite, also contributed to the cloud usage surge. The company added two sales-focused AI agents to the Copilot family in March and added a pay-as-you-go Copilot plan at the start of the year. 'Customers continue to adopt Copilot at a faster rate than any other new Microsoft 365 suite,' Nadella said, citing Barclays' plan to equip 100,000 employees with the tool after an initial deployment to 15,000 colleagues. Recommended Reading Microsoft captures one-quarter of global cloud spend in Q1 Sign in to access your portfolio