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Google fined record 2.42bn euros ($2.72bn) by European Commission

Moskalova

Member
Google has been fined €2.4bn ($2.7bn; £2.1bn) by the European Commission after it ruled the company had abused its power by promoting its own shopping comparison service at the top of search results.


The amount is the regulator's largest penalty to date against a company accused of distorting the market.
The ruling also orders Google to end its anti-competitive practices within 90 days or face a further penalty.

The US company may decide to appeal.

Google had previously suggested that Amazon and eBay had more influence over the public's spending habits and that the commission's views "failed to fit the reality of how most people shop online".

However, the decision could set a precedent that determines how the EU's civil service handles related complaints about the prominence Google gives to its own maps, flight price results and local business listings within its search tools.

More in the link: http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-40406542?ns_mchannel=social&ns_campaign=bbc_breaking&ns_source=twitter&ns_linkname=news_central

Update

 

GeoNeo

I disagree.
So where does this money go? European Commission have outline of what they do with these types of fines?
 

Walshicus

Member
Good.

The stuff Google is trying to achieve with it's various integrations is super scary for the long-term health of a number of industries.
 

Alx

Member
So where does this money go? European Commission have outline of what they do with these types of fines?

It goes to the general budget, but you can't attach it to a specific project, or the company fined would (rightfully) claim that it is being fined to fund something and not for breaking the law.
 

Dascu

Member
2.7b seems absurdly excessive for something this insignificant

2.4B sounds too little to curb the behaviour.

Vestager-Paris-Sept-2016.jpg
 

Mailbox

Member
2.7b seems absurdly excessive for something this insignificant

for a company as large as google, anything less would be a slap on the wrist compared to the money they gain from these practices.

"insignificant" means very little when large corps make bank off the idea they won't get hit hard. You have to curb that behavior , not make it profitable for companies.
 
Good read. It's really interesting to see what these major tech companies are doing, and there should be some pushback to it. Especially so because these companies don't even pay their fair share of tax in most countries.

Google especially is doing a ton of influencing they bring as if they are for a better user experience, but is also pulling more and more power to them. Just look at them using all that meta data in their search engine. They basically take content from others and then present it as an immediate answer so the user doesn't even have to go to the website anymore.

They put their own products on top (here Google Shopping, but also hotels, maps, travel info and more) which you just can't compete with anymore. And on top of that, they now control the largest browser marketshare, which they are going to use to push their wishes on advertising. Sure, it sounds nice for users, because nobody likes annoying ads. But it is an ad company setting the rules for competing ad companies, which is shady to say the least. Same way they push their own AMP pages - mentioned in the article also - which has the handy benefit of having publishers make content (and using ads) by Googles rules even more.

They deserve to be watched by authorities and called out and fined when necessary for these practices.

2.7b seems absurdly excessive for something this insignificant
Why? You got to place it in the context of Google being a major company with massive cash reserves. A small fine is not hurting them. It is also a warning; don't pull this shit in the future or for other things, because we will come after you for it.
 

GCX

Member
The effect of Google's illegal practices

Google's illegal practices have had a significant impact on competition between Google's own comparison shopping service and rival services. They allowed Google's comparison shopping service to make significant gains in traffic at the expense of its rivals and to the detriment of European consumers.

Given Google's dominance in general internet search, its search engine is an important source of traffic. As a result of Google's illegal practices, traffic to Google's comparison shopping service increased significantly, whilst rivals have suffered very substantial losses of traffic on a lasting basis.

- Since the beginning of each abuse, Google's comparison shopping service has increased its traffic 45-fold in the United Kingdom, 35-fold in Germany, 19-fold in France, 29-fold in the Netherlands, 17-fold in Spain and 14-fold in Italy.

- Following the demotions applied by Google, traffic to rival comparison shopping services on the other hand dropped significantly. For example, the Commission found specific evidence of sudden drops of traffic to certain rival websites of 85% in the United Kingdom, up to 92% in Germany and 80% in France. These sudden drops could also not be explained by other factors. Some competitors have adapted and managed to recover some traffic but never in full.

In combination with the Commission's other findings, this shows that Google's practices have stifled competition on the merits in comparison shopping markets, depriving European consumers of genuine choice and innovation.
Some interesting statistics there.
 

avaya

Member
Good start but the fine is far too low. The effective impact is 0.4% of market cap and only 7% of 2018 FCF. A small inconvenience to Alphabet.

EC competition regulation, whilst the best in the western world by some distance, does not adequately address the new reality of the FANG names. They should have gone for 10% of global sales.
 

numble

Member
Good start but the fine is far too low. The effective impact is 0.4% of market cap and only 7% of 2018 FCF. A small inconvenience to Alphabet.

EC competition regulation, whilst the best in the western world by some distance, does not adequately address the new reality of the FANG names. They should have gone for 10% of global sales.

The penalty for failing to comply is equivalent to up to 5% of revenue per day:

The company must now end the conduct within 90 days or face penalty payments of up to 5% of the average daily worldwide turnover of Alphabet, Google's parent company.
 

Mivey

Member
Seeing people defend Google, or technically, Alphabet just warms my heart.
Won't someone think of the multi-billion dollar global conglomerates?!
 

avaya

Member
The penalty for failing to comply is equivalent to up to 5% of revenue per day:

This penalty will not be enforced because Google will comply. That's why they should have gone for the max fine possible under regulation. Google hasn't got a leg to stand on when it comes to this.

Nevertheless Vestager is a truly excellent commissioner, she embodies the best of what the Commission was set up to do.
 

daxy

Member
Comes with the territory of being a big company i guess

The company that makes Saran Wrap, a brand so ubiquitous that we associate the brand with the product, willingly chose to remove toxic components this product once studies came out that about its detriments to health. This was done even though this was the component that gave Saran Wrap and edge over its competitors by making the product so durable. They lost a substantial amount of market dominance, as expected, but evidently they recognized that there's a balance to be struck between earning sweet sweet cash and being harmful to its users.
 
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