ClosingADoor
Member
No. It's about anti-competitive business practices by Google.We know - it's a money grab by the EU.
No. It's about anti-competitive business practices by Google.We know - it's a money grab by the EU.
You're just taking the piss now.We know - it's a money grab by the EU.
No. It's about anti-competitive business practices by Google.
It is harming competition, which is bad for consumers.That does no harm to consumers but the EU can use that as an excuse to go get some money.
Europeans point of view: Americans are so stupid for defending corporations.
Americans point of view: There's no harm here. This is Europe's version of 'merica!'.
C'mon, they were baiting users because they hoped Google+ would become the next Facebook if they took advantage of the Youtube userbase. It's the perfect example of them abusing their dominant position. They introduced G+ comments, but where's the ability to comment with Facebook or Twitter? They removed old Youtube-based comments to get you onto another service that basically only served as a means to comment for most. Lots of other websites allow you to use whatever service you want to comment on blogs/videos, but not Google.
So Google, because it's so popular, shouldn't advertise it's other services or encourage their use? Even though these services are often a part of the same interlinking platform?Again, this it not about consumers unable to switch from Google. This is about unfair business practices by Google in abusing their position on search to push their other services, which push competitors of those other services out of the market.
It is not about competition on search itself.
It is harming competition, which is bad for consumers.
S¡mon;203850693 said:It's okay to promote your own services above others when you do not own almost 100% of the market.
Also this:
Yes, because they have basically a monopoly on search, they should not abuse that position to influence their results to put their own services above others. If they do, the result is unfair competition.So Google, because it's so popular, shouldn't advertise it's other services or encourage their use? Even though these services are often a part of the same interlinking platform?
But doing this, Google is stopping competitors from entering the market. People prefer their search, that is not in question and is not a problem. The way they use that search to unfairly put their other services in front of users is.As has been stated several times here - search query results aren't the same as a glass cartel getting together and keeping new competitors from entering the market. Google's dominance is the result of people prefering their search results (which includes Google related products near the top). If people aren't fond of the search results Google provides there's other search engines to choose from.
What dominant position? You just said yourself that Facebook is the dominant service, so why not them be in the same position as google is right now? Remember myspace? When Facebook got more popular, myspace lost it's users and they fled to Facebook instead. Why is that OK?
What about Apple and iTunes, or Microsoft with Windows Server? How are they any different?
That seems awfully weird to make different companies ies abide by different rules. It opens the door up to favoritism by bureaucrats. Either no one is allowed to do it or everyone is allowed.
Yes, because they have basically a monopoly on search, they should not abuse that position to influence their results to put their own services above others. If they do, the result is unfair competition.
No one wih a market share that approaches monopolistic characteristics is allowed to do so.That seems awfully weird to make different companies ies abide by different rules. It opens the door up to favoritism by bureaucrats. Either no one is allowed to do it or everyone is allowed.
Yes, because they have basically a monopoly on search, they should not abuse that position to influence their results to put their own services above others. If they do, the result is unfair competition.
But doing this, Google is stopping competitors from entering the market. People prefer their search, that is not in question and is not a problem. The way they use that search to unfairly put their other services in front of users is.
This isn't about consumers.
Google is being punished for deliberately making competitors harder to find and misleading consumers.Google is being punished for making the best search algorithm and developing new products that they want people to use.
Dominant position with regards to Youtube and being about to traffic its users into its new social network platform forcefully rather than letting people sign in whatever account they want to comment if they weren't going to let regular Youtube accounts comment normally anymore.
But it's not a defacto monopoly because most people are using Google due to not knowing of choice.That's kind of crazy, software just... doesn't work like that. All software providers, when they have new or relevant products, link and recommend these products. And stuff like search engines are services that you have to actively seek out, it's not forced on consumers as the only choice.
Further, there is an actual difference - legally - between a monopoly where the consumers have no other choices because of actions taken by the producer, vs a defacto monopoly because all other options are not wanted. If two people are selling food, but one person sells food that always gives you the runs and no one buys from them - the other person has a monopoly, but not because they're actively doing anything.
Do you disagree?
This really really isn't how software works, and again is another problem with trying to shoehorn incompatible rules into a software ecosystem. It's bad architectural design to have many different authentication systems for an application, it's good design to have one authentication system for your suite of software. What's Google supposed to do, not improve their software because it might make them more popular?
Harder to find? Misleading consumers? Can you elaborate?S¡mon;203898442 said:Google is being punished for deliberately making competitors harder to find and misleading consumers.
In your analogy, what's the wall? In your analogy, the good vendor should be advertising on its stalls that the shitty vendor is down the street.But it's not a defacto monopoly because most people are using Google due to not knowing of choice.
Your example would make more sense if there were two food vendors, but one set up shop in front of the other and built a wall and no one goes to the second vendor because they don't know they can go behind the first. As such, people just eat what the first vendor provides because they don't know any better.
These are called oauth logins. A convenience feature created because everyone hates having too many authentication accounts. There are many different popular oauth login providers, but the big 3 are Twitter, Facebook and Google - and they don't generally provide you with other oauth logins. When you login with these accounts, you're almost always making a new proprietary account with whatever service you're using this oauth for. That list of permissions you give for these sign ins are the data used to populate this new account."This isn't how software works". Are you being serious, or have you never ever used a social network login to create an account on a website before? "Create an account, or sign in with Google+, Facebook, or Twitter."
"This isn't how software works" my fucking ass. Don't talk out your rear
If one food vendor owns all stores in a city, except for one, is there a monopoly or not? I think there is.That's kind of crazy, software just... doesn't work like that. All software providers, when they have new or relevant products, link and recommend these products. And stuff like search engines are services that you have to actively seek out, it's not forced on consumers as the only choice.
Further, there is an actual difference - legally - between a monopoly where the consumers have no other choices because of actions taken by the producer, vs a defacto monopoly because all other options are not wanted. If two people are selling food, but one person sells food that always gives you the runs and no one buys from them - the other person has a monopoly, but not because they're actively doing anything.
Do you disagree?
That can be argued. Google is basically the default search engine everywhere in Europe. Yes, people partly use it because it gives them the result they want. But that does not mean Google can just influence those results to favor their own stuff, when others might be more relevant.The order of the search results is what makes people flock to Google. It's part of the search results. People like it.
Pretty much. Google can make or break your online businesses because of their position. It would be the same as Microsoft saying "well, you got a great program there, works flawless, doing exactly what the user wants, but let's not allow that on Windows. What are you whining about, you can put it on Linux!" And meanwhile offering their own worse product instead.ITT lots of people who don't realize that Google users =! Google's customers. Google acts like a ginormous asshole towards its actual customers, which they can do because they have a quasi-monopoly on internet searches.
"This isn't how software works". Are you being serious, or have you never ever used a social network login to create an account on a website before? "Create an account, or sign in with Google+, Facebook, or Twitter."
"This isn't how software works" my fucking ass. Don't talk out your rear. Other commenting systems can implement it, I bet it wouldn't be hard for Google.
But it's not a defacto monopoly because most people are using Google due to not knowing of choice.
The wall is- get this- a wall. It's a wall.In your analogy, what's the wall? In your analogy, the good vendor should be advertising on its stalls that the shitty vendor is down the street.
Pretty sure most of the EU knows about Yahoo and Bing. IE/Edge defaults to Bing for search. Firefox by default uses Yahoo. Chrome does default to Google. So, the only way that they could possibly not know about other choices is they always chose to get Google Chrome as their default browser or didn't access the internet until iphones and Android phones existed.
That can be argued. Google is basically the default search engine everywhere in Europe. Yes, people partly use it because it gives them the result they want. But that does not mean Google can just influence those results to favor their own stuff, when others might be more relevant.
Your analogy is predicated on a wall preventing consumers from accessing stuff, and it just doesn't work even a little when there is no Google-wall, admit it.The wall is- get this- a wall. It's a wall.
There is no good or shitty vendor in my analogy. Only a lack of choice. You'd find the other food vendor like you would finding a result a few pages down in a google result.
Clearly, some disagree with you. You might think it is fine, but I don't. Google can't just randomly influence their search to push competitors in other fields out of the market. It is an abuse of their position. If that competitors result is more relevant then Googles own, then it should be higher.That's the key thing - it IS the search results people want. People want Google's search results - not Bing, not duckduckgo, and certainly not the EU's.
That's kind of crazy, software just... doesn't work like that. All software providers, when they have new or relevant products, link and recommend these products. And stuff like search engines are services that you have to actively seek out, it's not forced on consumers as the only choice.
Further, there is an actual difference - legally - between a monopoly where the consumers have no other choices because of actions taken by the producer, vs a defacto monopoly because all other options are not wanted. If two people are selling food, but one person sells food that always gives you the runs and no one buys from them - the other person has a monopoly, but not because they're actively doing anything.
Do you disagree?
Google built the wall. That's what I said.Your analogy is predicated on a wall preventing consumers from accessing stuff, and it just doesn't work even a little when there is no Google-wall, admit it.
I agreeish on this. It gets fuzzy when extrapolating this out to software, but at its heart i would say that this would be anti competitive, ish. The problem is that loss leaders are not inherently bad practice, and changing vendors isn't either, but the right combination gets murky.But what if, in your example, the other person has a dominant position because he sold at a loss at first (these days he is charging premium though), and later the people who delivered the food to him were banned from delivering food to the first guy (or the second guy will stop buying from them, forcing them to choose), and that's the reason the first guy now has inferior food that gives people the runs?
Wouldn't it make sense to make the second guy stop abusing his dominant position in the market?
Clearly, some disagree with you. You might think it is fine, but I don't. Google can't just randomly influence their search to push competitors in other fields out of the market. It is an abuse of their position. If that competitors result is more relevant then Googles own, then it should be higher.
But what if, in your example, the other person has a dominant position because he sold at a loss at first (these days he is charging premium though), and later the people who delivered the food to him were banned from delivering food to the first guy (or the second guy will stop buying from them, forcing them to choose), and that's the reason the first guy now has inferior food that gives people the runs?
Wouldn't it make sense to make the second guy stop abusing his dominant position in the market?
Google built the wall. That's what I said.
This thread is the perfect example of people thinking the illusion of choice is real choice. There are choices, but They are not known or pushed down in search results.
The wall represents needing to go looking for and then finding your alternate result around the bend - like when you go several pages into a Google search.
That.You're saying that the actual sorting algorithm itself is the anti competitive behaviour? Is there an accusation that Google is putting competing software products on the third+ page of results intentionally? I could get behind giving Google guff for that.
That.
is what the thread.
IS ABOUT!
Hooooly fuck.
As far as i understand, it's about Google not advertising for the competition, which is different than Google influencing their algorithm to hide the competition which would have otherwise organically shown itself on the first page - the latter, if true is bad, the former is.. whatever, not a realistic want.That.
is what the thread.
IS ABOUT!
Hooooly fuck.
Oh sod off lol. Businesses competing with Google count as businesses effected by Google preferencing their own services.i think you're in the wrong thread?
Which competition's search results are they suppressing, exactly? I go to google, I type "search" and it gives me Yahoo, Bing, DuckDuckGo, etc. I type "Web browser" and it gives me Opera and Firefox before Chrome, even. "Analytics" gives me several competitors' websites, as do "news" and "maps" and "mail" and "video sharing" and "blogs" and... you get the idea. The only product of theirs I'm not seeing competitors on is "self-driving car," but I think that's just because no one else has one that far in development yet.
Are there examples of this?Oh sod off lol. Businesses competing with Google count as businesses effected by Google preferencing their own services.
Preferencing your own services pushes other results down. There doesn't have to be a minimum amount of push down.
Oh sod off lol. Businesses competing with Google count as businesses effected by Google preferencing their own services.
thats different then hiding or suppressing competitors. the whole thing was about google ads and shopping showing up ahead of any other actual websites, at least that was my understanding, even years ago when they offered to redesign the way the shopping results are shown to make it clear that they were ads and not actual results.
I mean, if people had proof that they were intentionally mucking with results to withhold search results about competitors, fine the fuckers 6B. If its because they have a bar at top that says sponsored and has some results for shopping then goes to all the normal search results, i have a hard time seeing that as materially damaging, especially to the tune of 3B dollars.
For what it's worth, and I've stated this before, the investigation is also based on many documents that are not public (because they're internal Google stuff and trade secrets). In general, the case is a bit more complex than Google not showing Bing as a result or something.
As far as i understand, it's about Google not advertising for the competition, which is different than Google influencing their algorithm to hide the competition which would have otherwise organically shown itself on the first page - the latter, if true is bad, the former is.. whatever, not a realistic want.
That's the argument. There are basically two problems:You're saying that the actual sorting algorithm itself is the anti competitive behaviour? Is there an accusation that Google is putting competing software products on the third+ page of results intentionally? I could get behind giving Google guff for that.
Google is forcing their algorithm to show their own shopping options before everyone else's, over the organical algorithm's opinion.
You have to push down results to push your own results up, and I don't think that's cool.
Should be in the OP. I mean, there's probably tons of search data in there about result trends and whatnot that can't be replicated by a single search.
The argument the EU makes is that Google is in fact pushing results from competing services down (or, they've at least done so in the past).they don't really push them "down" that i can tell. They have the same amount of actual results, per page, with the shopping section on top or not. I have no idea what triggers the different layouts for google, i guess its resolution because i get them a lot on the side (besides mobile), which doesn't even remotely affect the appearance of actual returned results