its just deleting search results, not deleting the actual content
The "right to be forgotten" is idiotic. If it is a published fact, no government should have the right to censor it.
In this thread it is doubly so because the "right to be forgotten" is the EU telling Google "your search results are too good mang, you gots to delete this shit," while the other hand is telling Google "your search results suck, you gots to move this other stuff up in results!"
People are so quick to defend companies, especially tax dodging ones, ones that earn the most money and also pay the least tax. There's trillions in tax havens from companies like Google, Apple, Amazon, etc. There's more money in tax havens than multiple countries in Europe's GDPs combined, 3bn fine is *nothing* from what they truly should be fined as a business practice. IT companies like Google and Amazon are the largest contributors to this issue.
I don't see a problem. Google and a lot of other companies have no ground for complaints.
Keep avoiding taxes and we will keep finding bullshit reasons to fine you. Just a shame it is only 3 billion.
Our continent, our rules. We should also fine them another 3 billion for using color blue in the letter G of their name.
Got no sympathy for tax avoiding companies.
Anyone in the EU complaining about tax havens is a hypocrite. The EU allowed a tax haven in the EU and now it wants to complain about the fact that companies that opened offices in the EU to take advantage of the EU tax haven are paying less taxes?
If the EU is really against tax havens, then why allow them in the first place?
Like Google does with their Play Store and Android?
Android does not limit you to the Play Store. You can use any store you want. iOS limits you to the Apple App Store. You cannot even load another store on the device.
It's practically physically impossible to skip using Google.
My GF does the impossible then. She uses Bing every day.
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.
S¡mon;203898442 said:
Google is being punished for deliberately making competitors harder to find and misleading consumers.
What "services" does Google put above others in results? People keep repeating this over-and-over in this thread but fail to produce concrete examples.
The closest I've seen are anti-Google posters claiming that the sponsored ads on the page are somehow anti-competitive, because even though they are clearly labeled as ads (and have been for years) EU citizens are too dense to realize this and confuse them with organic results.
S¡mon;203898262 said:
Also, it's not like this fine (which hasn't been confirmed yet, by the way) comes out of nowhere. Europe has warned Google for years and has asked for proper change in their currently-not-so-neutral search results.
If Google's results were 100% neutral, it wouldn't be an effective search. Instead it would just return trash results filled with keyword spam.
Google gets used by most precisely because it isn't 100% neutral and instead sorts by relevance.
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.
Maybe the EU doesn't know about IE/Edge and Bing because it doesn't let Microsoft ship Windows with a web browser.
And anyone choosing Chrome as a default is off their rocker. It has a memory leak a mile wide. Firefox is where it's at and that doesn't default to Google search at all.
EU needs to step up its tech game.
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.
The general complaint seems to be that Google puts ads on its search results pages.
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.
Pretty much this.
Google is forcing their algorithm to show their own shopping options before everyone else's, over the organical algorithm's opinion.
And "shopping options" are ads. A free service has ads (that don't hide any of the organic results). They're even labeled as ads.
I use Google. I like Google. It does what I want of it. That is not the problem. I use Google, Youtube, Google Calendar, Gmail, Google Apps, Youtube, Doubleclick and more. This all is not the point.
This is about Google being anti-competitive to other businesses (which in the end can hurt consumers). Not in search. But in the other areas they are being active in. The example investigated now is their Google Shopping results, that are pushed to the top of their page, while it are not the most relevant results. Google is abusing their position in search to push their other activities in the spotlight. Something that can be anti-competitive when you have a (near) monopoly.
You are claiming that Google is "abusing its position" because it is putting ads on the search results page. What is the solution? Google should offer a completely ad-free product because you don't like ads on the page?