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Alleged Secret Google Antitrust Proposals Leaked

itwbennett writes "Google's latest proposals aimed at avoiding an antitrust fine from European authorities have been leaked amid growing anger over the secrecy surrounding the case. The documents, which have been verified by sources in possession of the originals, revealed the full remedies put forward by Google, the questionnaire that rivals have been asked to fill in giving their response to the remedies and a comparison document showing the changes in Google's remedies since the last proposals. Unlike the first round of so-called 'market testing,' Google's revised proposals have not been made public and were only sent to 125 interested parties who were warned that they were not to be made public."

4 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. Hmmm .... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, how exactly is it that Google gets to dictate that these stay private?

    It's Google who committed the offenses, and they're being punished by the European regulators.

    Why does this seem like Google is the one dictating how this plays out? That makes no sense to me.

    These back room deals don't help any but Google -- who is no doubt proposing things which don't actually limit or change how they do things, but just a few token gestures.

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    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  2. They built the best search engine, so punish them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Really, is it a crime to be better than your competitors?

  3. Re:They built the best search engine, so punish th by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm attempting to figure out what Google has done that has functioned as an antitrust-type of scenario...

    Search engines? At the time they came out there was a crowded market in Internet search. There are still competitors that come and go, and Google does not appear to be interested in buying them out.
    Advertising? Last time I checked, Doubleclick was not the only ad-delivery that's blocked by my adblocker...
    Mail? Gmail is certainly not the only e-mail provider, by a longshot, and most of us who've migrated to it have done so because it's proven to be long-term reliable so our e-mail addresses haven't had to change.
    Calendaring, collaboration, productivity suites, file storage? No, lots of companies do those things.
    Web Browsers? Given that I'm typing this using a Mozilla browser...
    Operating Systems? Android has competition with iOS, and to a lesser extent with Windows Phone and Blackberry. Chrome is in its relative infancy, competing with MacOS, Windows, GNU/Linux, and even Android.
    Maps? I can get maps from several providers.

    I won't deny, Google does one hell of a good job integrating their various services, and they're also willing to modify their services at-will. They provide platforms for which others can develop things to either use features of Google's services or can integrate their own services, but they are willing to yank the floor out from under someone's creation with little or no notice. But, they're not usually charging the developer or user of this third-party addon either, so it's hard to claim that they're not in their rights to do this.

    If the issue is the very nature of the tight integration, where a user will go from using Google's search engine to using their maps, calendar, e-mail, etc, again I point out that they've made the entire process of using these systems very smooth, and that when a Google service has proven to be clunky people don't use it. They also don't stop competitors like Microsoft or even Yahoo from developing their own integrated suites.

    I'd really like to know what's considered antitrust...

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    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  4. Re:They built the best search engine, so punish th by Sockatume · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you had to completely obliterate all competition before you could be prosecuted for anticompetitive action, it would completely defeat the purpose of the legislation.

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    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?