Chinese regulatory authorities have approved Google's acquisition of Motorola
Mobility, paving the way for the deal to close within the week, company
officials confirmed Saturday.
The companies announced last August that they had entered into an agreement
for Google to acquire mobile phone and tablet maker Motorola Mobility for about
US$12.5 billion.
"We are pleased that the deal has received approval in all jurisdictions,"
Motorola spokesperson Jennifer Erickson said Saturday. "We expect to close early
next week."
A Google spokesperson confirmed the deal was approved early Saturday and that
it should close within the week.
Motorola Mobility ships phones and tablets with Google's Android operating
system. The close of the deal means that Google has a hardware manufacturing arm
with which it can closely work to develop Android.
Google will also have control of Motorola's massive patent portfolio.
Motorola Mobility has said that it owns or has applied for more than 24,000
patents.
The deal has already been approved by antitrust authorities in the U.S. and
Europe. Chinese authorities have approved the deal on condition that Google keep
Android free and available to other mobile device manufacturers for five years,
according to a source close to the deal.
Other conditions include a commitment by Google to meet obligations to
license patents for industry standard technology on FRAND (fair, reasonable, and
non-discriminator) terms, according to the source.
FRAND terms typically involve
licensing obligations required by standards-setting bodies for members that get
involved in the standard-setting process, and for companies whose technology is
approved as part of industry standards.
The conditions set by the Chinese are similar to those involved in the
approval process in Europe and the U.S., according to the source.
Motorola Mobility's manufacturing might and vast array of patents will be
crucial in Google's battle for dominance in the smartphone and tablet market as
it competes with Apple. Google will also compete with Microsoft as Microsoft
promotes new versions of Windows in the tablet and smartphone market.
An open question is whether mobile device manufacturers that currently use
Android will see Google as a competitor, and possibly be drawn to the Microsoft
camp.
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