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Google To Comply With EU Search Demands To Avoid More Fines (bloomberg.com)

Google will comply with Europe's demands to change the way it runs its shopping search service, a rare instance of the internet giant bowing to regulatory pressure to avoid more fines. From a report: The Alphabet unit faced a Tuesday deadline to tell the European Union how it planned to follow an order to stop discriminating against rival shopping search services in the region. A Google spokeswoman said it is sharing that plan with regulators before the deadline expires, but declined to comment further. The EU fined Google a record 2.4 billion euros ($2.7 billion) in late June for breaking antitrust rules by skewing its general search results to unfairly favor its own shopping service over rival sites. The company had 60 days to propose how it would "stop its illegal content" and 90 days to make changes to how the company displays shopping results when users search for a product. Those changes need to be put in place by Sept. 28 to stave off a risk that the EU could fine the company 5 percent of daily revenue for each day it fails to comply. "The obligation to comply is fully Google's responsibility," the European Commission said in an emailed statement, without elaborating on what the company must do to comply.

8 of 50 comments (clear)

  1. Good. by fred6666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A corporation obeys laws. The way it should be.

    1. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Google is under no obligation to *advertise* their competitor's products. They're a private for-profit company, not a public search utility that is required to be unbiased and provide equal representation for all.

      Yes, many people treat it as a public utility, but they're not, and this ruling is stupid. Google is only complying with it because the bureaucrats won't let go until they're bribed.

  2. Re:Not always as easy as it sounds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Obeying the law is much harder when they make the law as vague as possible, then just tell the company they are in violation and have to fix it - without telling them what "fixed" looks like.

  3. Re:Extortion pure and simple by klingens · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unlike, say, MS-Office or Adobe Acrobat, no one is forced to use the Google search engine, for compatibility or any other reason. .

    Nobody was forced to use Microsoft Windows either, never was. There always were competitive products out there. Same for Acrobat. However when Microsoft used their market power in OSes to gain a market in Browsers, the Antitrust lawyers closed in for a kill. Imho for the right reasons, even when it was unsuccessful in the end.

    Same with Google: it doesn't matter how many other competitors there are or not are (and they exist, Bing being the biggest), Google has around 90%+ marketshare in general search engines. So if they use this to gain an advantage in a specialized search engine field, like price search, then they violate the law, just like MSFT did with their browser. All that matters, is Google a monopoly in the eye of the law, and it certainly is. Why or how they are a monopoly is totally irrelevant.

  4. Re:Would this happen to a EU company? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mod parent down.

    It's just bullshit. The EU fines plenty of local companies, but you only hear the endless whining on slashdot when an American company gets fined. American companies are not special in the EU. They have the choice of sticking to the laws, or taking their business elsewhere.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  5. Re:Would this happen to a EU company? by Freischutz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We often see the EU drag Google and Microsoft on to the carpet for another kangaroo court session, but does the EU actually do anything more than just be an instrument of xenophobic anti-Americanism? They need to clean their own house.

    A good example: If VW were an American company and was discovered breaking the diesel emissions requirements, how long would they exist in Europe before being fined out of existence?

    Getting a kick out of feeling like the perpetual victim are we? This only looks unfair to US corporations if you limit your field of view to subset of American companies that get fined and conveniently ignore the fact that European companies get monster fines from the EU too. The question you should be asking is why the EU is fining these guys while the US govt. sits happily by and does nothing while they screw US consumers in the same exact way? One of the things I like about the EU is that once in a while it actually kicks abusive mega corporations in the nuts with monster fines that actually get these assholes to pay attention and modify their behaviour. Meanwhile US politicians are still peddling re-packaged and re-branded versions of the old bullshit about 'voluntary self regulation by industry' and that a soulless corporation is a person with a sound set of christian moral values whose chief concern is the well being of the consumer.

  6. Re:Would this happen to a EU company? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The overwhelming majority of EU cases for anti-competitive behaviour involve European companies. That they aren't mentioned doesn't mean they don't happen. Unlike the US, the European Union does not use regulatory agencies as weapons of protectionism.

    A good example: If VW were an American company and was discovered breaking the diesel emissions requirements, how long would they exist in Europe before being fined out of existence?

    Considering that Ford, GM and Fiat Chrysler haven't paid a cent for their cheating with diesel emissions in Europe, the answer is evident: indefinitely.

    It is also interesting to note that GM, Ford and Fiat Chrysler and its predecessors have never received fines in the US anywhere near to what the Americans slapped on VW despite all three having very long histories of all kinds of unlawful behaviour.

  7. Re: Socialism stifling innovation by KGIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Disturbingly, a company deciding to obey the law is considered news. Let that sink in...

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."