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Tizen may have an unlikely ally – the Russian government

August 25, 2025

If you ask shoppers in India, the first Tizen phone ispretty unexciting. If you ask Samsung, it’s anearnest success. Regardless whom you choose to believe, Tizen has its work cut out – Android ison the verge of taking 90 percent of the market, developers have little reason to sink resources in nascent platforms, and users won’t care about an operating system that lacks apps. Just askMicrosoft.

But Samsung may have found an unlikely ally in its bid to makeTizena real alternative to Android – the Russian government. In a series of tweets, Russian minister of communicationNikolai Nikiforovdecried the “monopoly” that Google has over Android, which is not a true open source OS in his opinion. Nikiforov linked to articles discussing Google’s control over its mobile operating system and mentioned Tizen, Sailfish, and Ubuntu as real open source projects that could compete with Android.

Tizen-in-the-Big-Picture

Nikiforov sees the need to break the monopoly of American companies over mobile operating systems. What’s more, Russia is supposedly ready to support the development of Android competitors, including through grants paid to developers wishing to develop for Tizen or Sailfish.

It’s tempting to dismiss these statements as politicians doing what they do best – making empty promises. That’s especially true now that Western sanctions over the Ukrainian crisis are taking their toll on the Russian economy, and the local tech sector hasn’t been spared. Apple and Google havestopped doing business with developers based in Crimea, while Google has recentlyclosed its engineering officesin Moscow.

On the other hand, Russia is a big and important market, where Google’s presence is weaker than in other regions. That’s one of the reasons Samsung originally tried to launch its first Tizen smartphone in Russia – theSamsung Z was officially announcedlast year here, but its commercial release wasrepeatedly delayedin order to give developers more time to create apps for Tizen.

It remains to be seen whether Russia’s words will be backed by Russian money, but Samsung is probably very pleased about this development. The Korean giant poured tons of resources into getting Tizen off the ground, and now that it’s finally a real platform, it needs all the help it can get, even when it comes from such improbable sources as the Russian government.

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