Apple Inc's new version of its iPhone and iPad software will not include
a pre-loaded app for Google Inc's popular video website, YouTube, Apple
said on Monday.
It was the latest sign of the growing rivalry between
the technology companies that once were closely aligned but now are
vying for supremacy in the fast-growing mobile computing market.
Earlier this year, Apple said it would dump Google's mapping software from its mobile devices.
"Apple
and Google are the mobile operating systems for the future and this is
where the battleground is going to lie," said Needham & Co analyst
Kerry Rice.
"If it's going to be a two-horse race, you certainly don't want to give the other horse any kind of lead," he said.
Google,
the world's No.1 Web search engine, is also the maker of the most
popular smartphone software with its Android operating system. In May,
Google closed the $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility,
setting the stage for Google to more tightly integrate its smartphone
software and hardware and mount a more direct challenge to Apple's
iPhone.
Apple said in a statement on Monday that its license to
include the YouTube app in the iOS operating system "has ended." Apple
noted that "customers can use YouTube in the Safari browser and Google
is working on a new YouTube app to be on the app store."
An Apple
spokeswoman declined to comment on whether the company's YouTube license
included any financial terms, or on whether Apple planned to replace
YouTube with another pre-installed online video app from a different
company.
YouTube has been among a handful of apps that come
pre-loaded onto the screens of Apple's mobile devices since the original
iPhone was introduced in 2007.
But the app, which was actually
built by Apple using YouTube's standards, did not appear to be as
full-featured as YouTube's own website: the YouTube app does not appear
to feature any advertising, and the catalog of available music videos
lacks many of the titles found on the website.
Analysts said
Google was unlikely to take much of a financial hit from the move,
though it could complicate Google's efforts to expand online services to
the growing ranks of mobile users.
"It's a risk to Google's
overall mobile approach and strategy, in that their services are not
going to be as easy to find as they used to be," said ThinkEquity
analyst Ronald Josey. "They need to be everywhere that users are."
More
worrisome, said Josey, is what the move could mean for Google's deal
with Apple to be the default search engine on the iPhone.
"The
writing's on the wall that when search is up for renewal, there's a
significant chance that Google may not be the default," said Josey.
Analysts believe Google generates a significant portion of mobile advertising revenue from iPhone users.
Former
Google CEO Eric Schmidt once sat on Apple's board of directors, but the
relationship between the two companies has frayed. Apple's co-founder,
the late Steve Jobs, was quoted as saying he was willing to go
"thermonuclear" on the search leader, after it decided to position
Android against the iPhone.
News of YouTube's disappearance from
Apple's mobile software came as Apple released a new test version on
Monday of the iOS 6 software, which for the first time did not include
the YouTube app. The final version of iOS 6 is due for release sometime
in the Fall.
YouTube is one of the most popular destinations on
the Internet, with more than 800 million unique monthly visitors who
stream 4 billion videos a day.
Google said in a statement that it
was working with Apple to ensure that it has "the best possible YouTube
experience for iOS users."
Shares of Google finished Monday's regular session up 1 percent at $622.19. Apple shares were up 1.1 percent at $622.55.
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012
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