ClosingADoor
Member
Because that would go down well with the EU authorities and doesn't at all seem like Google is just trying to bypass their requirements...They should just make a separate Google for Europe, like Google.co.uk or something
That way it would exist, but if people prefer to go to Google.com and get results like they do now, they could. I don't think it's fair to have them make changes that will affect Google outside of the EU
To take your example, imagine your company is the only health insurance company in the country. And then you are constantly pushing unrelated products another department in the company also sells to your clients, while competing businesses have very limited ways to reach the clients you have. At that point the competition would get a bit unfair, doesn't it?right I get that. I'm just saying that as an American and from the point of view of our laws this just looks like Cross-Selling, which is a standard practice of using something you have already sold someone as an entry point to sell them on another part of your business. For instance in my case I work for a worker's assistance branch of a health insurance company. We talk to our general health insurance group clients constantly to sell them on our product.
I'm not going to read the whole of EU law that the other guy posted, I'm already sure google violated it because its easy enough to understand conceptually what is being viewed as anti-trust. I just felt like pointing out the optics of it from American law.
I can offer a better product, but I have no way to reach people, because you are the only one in the country with access to them. That prevents healthy competition and can drive up prices.
I'm actually pretty surprised it seems mostly Americans are against this ruling, since this is about giving businesses a way to growth and more competition. Something that is pretty essential for a functional free market.
It is kind of strange that between regulatory agencies that are set up to protect citizens and corporations that don't care about you, you pick the corporation and see them as "smart." I guess abusing your power is "smart" then.I'm aware. I've been following this case for a bit. Google does have crazy advantage but I'm more laissez faire about these things.
You know that will eventually happen with Facebook and Amazon. I don't know if old school industrial revolution laws work here. That is all.
It's a classic cat and mouse game and Google has way smarter people working for it than these regulatory agencies.