Google faces antitrust lawsuit over Google Play Store fees / Nintendo announced OLED Switch / 'EV Day' event held for Stellantis

Published: July 9, 2021, 1 p.m.

The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Adi Robertson discuss the new antitrust lawsuit Google faces from 36 states, the new hardware Nintendo announced this week, and what happened at Stellantis' \u2018EV Day\u2019.\nFurther reading:\n\nWho needs COVID-19 boosters?\n\nModerna starts human trials of an mRNA-based flu shot\n\nFull approval could make the difference for the US COVID-19 vaccine campaign\n\nExposure notification apps could be more effective if they\u2019re better at assessing risk\n\nGoogle faces new antitrust lawsuit over Google Play Store fees\n\nGoogle feared Samsung Galaxy Store and tried to quash it, lawsuit alleges\n\nApple and Google crowd out the competition with default apps\xa0\n\nDonald Trump files sweeping, nonsensical lawsuits against Facebook, Twitter, and Google\n\nTwitter has lost legal immunity for users\u2019 posts in India, government argue\n\nNintendo\u2019s OLED Switch: all of the news about the console upgrade\n\nDon\u2019t count out the Nintendo Switch Pro\n\nA bigger, better Switch screen is exactly what I wanted\n\nStellantis, parent company of Dodge and Jeep, had an \u2018EV Day\u2019 and it was extremely weird\n\nVerizon has its own version of spatial audio and it\u2019s already pushing it on phones\n\nAT&T joins T-Mobile in switching all Android phones to Google\u2019s Messages app for RCS\n\nElon Musk just now realizing that self-driving cars are a \u2018hard problem\u2019\n\niOS 15 and iPadOS 15 preview: a first look at Apple\u2019s latest software\n\nMaine passes the strongest state facial recognition ban yet\n\nWelcome to Simulation City, the virtual world where Waymo tests its autonomous vehicles\n\n\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices