Google Slapped With $2.7 Billion By EU For Skewing Searches (bloomberg.com) 362
Google suffered a major regulatory blow on Tuesday after European antitrust officials fined the search giant 2.4 billion euros, or $2.7 billion, for unfairly favoring some of its own search services over those of rivals. The European Commission concluded that the search giant abused its near-monopoly in online search to "give illegal advantage" to its own Shopping service. Margrethe Vestager, the EU's competition commissioner, said Google "denied other companies the chance to compete" and left consumers without "genuine choice." The hefty fine marks the latest chapter in a lengthy standoff between Europe and Google, which also faces two separate charges under the region's competition rules related to Android, its popular mobile software, and to some of its advertising products. From a report: Google has 90 days to "stop its illegal conduct" and give equal treatment to rival price-comparison services, according to a binding order from the European Commission on Tuesday. It's up to Google to choose how it does this and it must tell the EU within 60 days of its plans. Failure to comply brings a risk of fines of up to 5 percent of its daily revenue. [...] "I expect the Commission now to swiftly conclude the other two ongoing investigations against Google," Markus Ferber, a member of the European Parliament from Germany. "Unfortunately, the Google case also illustrates that competition cases tend to drag on for far too long before they are eventually resolved. In a fast-moving digital economy this means often enough that market abuse actually pays off and the abuser succeeds in eliminating the competition." Google has been pushing its own comparison shopping service since 2008, systematically giving it prominent placement when people search for an item, the EU said. Rival comparison sites usually only appear on page four of search results, effectively denying them a massive audience as the first page attracts 95 percent of all clicks. In a blog post, Google said the EU has "underestimated" the value Google's services brings to the table. "We believe the European Commission's online shopping decision underestimates the value of those kinds of fast and easy connections. While some comparison shopping sites naturally want Google to show them more prominently, our data show that people usually prefer links that take them directly to the products they want, not to websites where they have to repeat their searches. We think our current shopping results are useful and are a much-improved version of the text-only ads we showed a decade ago. Showing ads that include pictures, ratings, and prices benefits us, our advertisers, and most of all, our users. And we show them only when your feedback tells us they are relevant. Thousands of European merchants use these ads to compete with larger companies like Amazon and eBay. [...] Given the evidence, we respectfully disagree with the conclusions announced today. We will review the Commission's decision in detail as we consider an appeal, and we look forward to continuing to make our case," wrote Kent Walker, SVP and General Counsel at Google.
Not sure how that works (Score:3)
I'm not sure how this one works. Google can find information, in this case about products. Searching for a product would normally just bring up Amazon, and skip the price comparison altogether. Is Google just not allowed to supply this service?
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The problem is it wasn't returning Amazon specifically. It was returning Google Shopping, despite the fact nobody likes or uses Google Shopping, which is unfair to the other shopping comparison sites that exist.
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Go to google.com.
Click the 'Shopping' tab.
Type in product to search for.
See many different products from multiple vendors.
So, what's the problem?
Click on the little circled 'i' beside "Merchant links are sponsored".
Read this text:
The EU court apparently believe
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The EU court apparently believes that merchants who don't pay Google to display their products in Shopping should have their products displayed along with the products offered by merchants who do pay Google.
Where are you reading that ? The problem is that there are other shopping comparison sites that compete with Google Shopping, and these sites are demoted in the search results, not because they are bad sites, but only because they compete with Google. Read TFA:
Google has demoted rival comparison shopping services in its search results: rival comparison shopping services appear in Google's search results on the basis of Google's generic search algorithms. Google has included a number of criteria in these algorithms, as a result of which rival comparison shopping services are demoted. Evidence shows that even the most highly ranked rival service appears on average only on page four of Google's search results, and others appear even further down. Google's own comparison shopping service is not subject to Google's generic search algorithms, including such demotions.
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Google doesn't demote them, rather in terms of the search algorithm, they fall pretty far down the list, and for a very good reason: By hitting a price comparison, the user has to search AGAIN for what they just searched for.
Not true. I just tested by doing a search for "pantene shampoo", on local server with local language settings. If I click on the link with the comparison site (which is at the top of the page now), it takes me straight to the entry on pantene shampoos.
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Whoa. Holy shit. I think I might be misunderstanding, so I just want someone to sanity-check me or test my reading comprehension. Surely I have made a hilariously stupid mistake in basic reading comprehension, and if there is one thing I trust the Internet for, it's for telling me how stupendously wrong I am about something:
My understanding was that this EU fine was about generic search. It's not about if a user does more than enter the name of a product; it's not about if a clicks
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My understanding was that this EU fine was about generic search.
You were correct. It is about generic search demoting competing shopping sites in the results. It has nothing to do with the Shopping tab.
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I'm not sure how this one works. Google can find information, in this case about products. Searching for a product would normally just bring up Amazon, and skip the price comparison altogether. Is Google just not allowed to supply this service?
My guess is that it's about the "shopping" bar with pictures and prices. I think that they would have to either remove this or add a couple of links which are to price comparrison sites rather than directly to products.
I would think that the "shopping" tab would be OK as anyone would expect that this would lead to Google's service, just as they would expect searches revealing a maps tab top go to google maps and not bing maps, open streetmap, or others.
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I would think that the "shopping" tab would be OK as anyone would expect that this would lead to Google's service, just as they would expect searches revealing a maps tab top go to google maps and not bing maps, open streetmap, or others.
Google has a 'maps' tab at the top of their UI, which is perfectly fine.
However, when you search for "maps" in google search (here in EU on a local server), a link for Bing maps only shows up on result page 11, and openstreetmap or yahoo maps don't show up at all.
Re:Not sure how that works (Score:5, Informative)
That's probably because Google users use Google maps. In the US, Google just shows you a map if you search for something mappable, like a hotel, a particular store, or an address. Clicking it takes you to the Google Maps result.
Imagine if you searched for a nearby pharmacy, then had to look up their hours, then go to Google Maps to search for such pharmacies near you. Instead, if I type "CVS Pharmacy Hours" into Google, it gives me that immediately, as well as a map showing the nearest one--which takes me to Google maps. I can make decisions about new information while gathering information, and those decisions are largely supported by the next steps being right in front of me.
If I wanted to use Bing, I'd go to Bing.
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If I wanted to use Bing, I'd go to Bing.
But if I want to use google search to find out about other map providers, I'd like to see them show up in a fair way, and not have google pretend it's the only map provider there is.
Re:Not sure how that works (Score:5, Insightful)
Now if you Google maps, you of course get Google at the top of their list, but low and behold you get mapquest and then Yahoo and then apple. They don't pretend they are the only provider. But if you do a search for something, they are going to use their resources and provide the map info with their maps.
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But if you do a search for something, they are going to use their resources and provide the map info with their maps.
I'm not talking about searching for the name of a business near me. In that case, it would be perfectly acceptable for them to send me a link to google maps.
I'm talking about searching for the word "maps".
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google.ca
First: google
Second: mapquest
Third: wikipedia
bing.com
First: google
Second: bing
Third: mapquest
yahoo.ca
First: google
Second: bing
Third: mapquest
So... what's the problem really? That bing isn't popular enough on google results?
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That bing isn't popular enough on google results?
Right. If the other search providers put bing maps in the top-3, why does google put it on page 11 ? And not just bing maps, mapquest and openstreetmap are completely absent from the search results.
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The other search providers mentioned are both Bing.
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MapQuest is on page one for me, Bing maps on page two. I didn't see openstreetmap on the first three pages.
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I'm talking about searching for the word "maps".
I usually use DDG, so I opened up a page with Google - on a Chromebook even, and typed in "maps".
Top hit was Google maps.
Second hit was Android apps maps, so still Google.
Third was Mapquest
Fourth was Yahoo Maps
Fifth was iOS maps
Then an iTunes store for Google maps
Then maps.com for actual hardcopy maps
I don't get it - what's the problem? Are you demanding that Google put everyone else above their own hits?
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I opened up a page with Google - on a Chromebook even, and typed in "maps".
I assume you are using a US server.
what's the problem? Are you demanding that Google put everyone else above their own hits?
The problem is that here in EU, the local google search does not return mapquest, yahoo, bing, iOS, or openstreetmaps at all, or only after 10+ pages of other search results. It's perfectly fine if Google is on top because it's the most popular. It's not fine if Google takes extra effort to hide all the competition.
Re:Not sure how that works (Score:4, Insightful)
But if I want to use google search to find out about other map providers, I'd like to see them show up in a fair way, and not have google pretend it's the only map provider there is.
I just did such a search, and Wikipedia's article about Unfolding Maps was the very first link, followed by the Wikipedia article on map providers, followed by many non-Google links.
The European antritrust officials are STILL on some powerful Crack. The reason people use Google over (Bing Is Not Google) and Yahoo! (or more appropriate, "Oh No!") and all the rest is because Google sucks the least, by a galactic margin. But these dummies are saying, "you have outclassed your competitors by too much, and have satisfied your users too many times. We are compelling you to make your services suck more so you will sink down to their level."
But Microsoft got off with little more than a stern warning ($300M was trivial to Microsoft), and a requirement to publish documentation, for decades of actual severe damage caused by its actual, as opposed to Google's fictitious, monopoly abuse.
And now, they're going after Google for Android?! What the fuck?! Android isn't the problem. Not by a long shot. If the European Commission wants to open up Mobile competition, then require all manufacturers of Mobile components to publish their specifications, and disallow patents on Mobile devices and software. The problem will solve itself. But instead, they are wasting their time on Google.
Good job, you dumb fucks.
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We are compelling you to make your services suck more so you will sink down to their level.
How is providing an honest search result equal to "make your services suck more" ?
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What is "honest"? Different algorithms for search will provide different results
"honest" is not demoting sites just because they are competing with Google, as the EU has demonstrated they do.
If you don't like it, don't use Google. It's that simple
The law doesn't work that way. Google needs to fix their shop. It's that simple.
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There's nothing novel about this. Companies can have effective monopolies, but they can't use them to push their own products in other areas. The EU is saying that Google dominates Internet search, and is using that to push its own products more than competitor's products. That, if true, is enough reason to go after Google.
It doesn't matter how stuck people are on Google, only that they use it predominantly. For the purpose of anticompetitive acts, it doesn't matter if people can switch to something
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But if I want to use google search to find out about other map providers, I'd like to see them show up in a fair way, and not have google pretend it's the only map provider there is.
I hope that is a hypothetical situation with a really gullible person living under a rock who hasn't used a computer before.
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But if I want to use google search to find out about other map providers, I'd like to see them show up in a fair way, and not have google pretend it's the only map provider there is.
Then do a Google search for "map providers" or "internet mapping tools". But if you search for "nearest CVS to Times Square" on Google, it's hard to see how Google is at fault for providing you exactly the information you searched for.
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That's what I did. I searched for "maps". As mentioned several times already.
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In other words you want to bury the good map sites in pages and pages of shit links
No, but that's exactly what Google does. It shows itself at the top of the search results, followed by pages of random links to small maps of local libraries and museums, and then Bing maps way far down on page 11.
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You search for map sites like mapquest.com, bing maps, yahoo maps, and Google maps? I'm pretty sure any of those four belongs on the 9,874th page of a google search for "maps".
Google doesn't appear to bury me in ads. I don't have an adblocker installed.
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The EU says that Google is abusing their dominant position in search by proposing their own tools (like maps) first.
Even though I don't use Google to search for addresses directly in the general search pages as many do, I still see more value in allowing Google to bring up their own maps rather than having to bury it behind pages of advertisement filled crap as the EU wants.
Re:Not sure how that works (Score:4, Informative)
I still see more value in allowing Google to bring up their own maps rather than having to bury it behind pages of advertisement filled crap as the EU wants.
The EU doesn't want that. They just want fair and equal results. It's okay if Google puts their own results first, if that is appropriate according to a fair page ranking algorithm. In the EU case, Google Shopping was not very popular, but Google put the results prominently at the top of their search results, while at the same time moving popular competing shopping comparison sites to page 4 and further.
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Imagine if you searched for a nearby pharmacy, then had to look up their hours,
Imagine looking up "pharmacy" in a convenient compilation of local businesses to find their telephone number...we could call this a "telephone book". Then calling them to find out their hours. ;)
Joking aside, it is a bit astounding that the EC doesn't seem to quite get the value of aggregated information. Certainly, it would be nice for other price-comparison sites to be better represented, but I imagine there are a few technical details being missed. For example, if I search for "pantene shampoo", I get th
Re:Not sure how that works (Score:4, Informative)
Google displays shopping results at the top of relevant searches, or on the shopping tab. With other types of search they show other sites in the mix, e.g. video search shows YouTube and Vimeo and DailyMotion and others. The issue that the EU has is that Google's shopping results only show Google Shopping links, and not links to other price comparison sites.
This might actually improve Google Shopping, which is kind of crap. For some reason it always gives me prices in USD and shops in the US, even though I'm on the .co.uk domain. It's sorting and filtering systems are terrible. It rarely finds the best price either. It doesn't work nearly as well as Google search, which does include results from other services.
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I would think that the "shopping" tab would be OK as anyone would expect that this would lead to Google's service, just as they would expect searches revealing a maps tab top go to google maps and not bing maps, open streetmap, or others.
Google has a 'maps' tab at the top of their UI, which is perfectly fine.
However, when you search for "maps" in google search (here in EU on a local server), a link for Bing maps only shows up on result page 11, and openstreetmap or yahoo maps don't show up at all.
Funny in the UK on the first page I get:
Google Maps
OS (Ordnance Survey) online
www.streetmap.co.uk
The AA maps, routes, traffic
https://www.viamichelin.co.uk/... [viamichelin.co.uk]
Map - Wikipedia
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Google isn't my default search
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Are you sure that you're using Google? Your results look very much like the ones I get from DuckDuckGo.
Interesting. Google is my default search engine and I am certainly sing it via the https://www.google.co.uk/ [google.co.uk] URL
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Android Google maps app
Official MapQuest
Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies: MAPS
iOS - Maps - Apple
Google Maps in the iTunes app store
Yahoo maps
Maps.com
Bing Maps
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Google will display ads as part of the results, either to its own services, or to companies who bought them. On some platforms (mobile), there'll be cases where no result aren't from either.
Excellent news. (Score:2, Interesting)
This judgement makes me happy.
(as an aside, it does also bring revenue in from an entity that appears to abuse the Dutch Sandwich tax process..)
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But which law is broken? If they don't have monopoly, they aren't abusing a monopoly.
I'm kind of confused by the summery, it states Google has "near-monopoly". They are being punished for "nearly" having monopoly?
Either they have monopoly or they don't.
If they don't have a monopoly, they aren't doing anything wrong.
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Have you tried reading the article ? It explains it right here:
Today's Decision concludes that Google is dominant in general internet search markets throughout the European Economic Area (EEA), i.e. in all 31 EEA countries. It found Google to have been dominant in general internet search markets in all EEA countries since 2008, except in the Czech Republic where the Decision has established dominance since 2011. This assessment is based on the fact that Google's search engine has held very high market shares in all EEA countries, exceeding 90% in most
Re:Excellent news. (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the EU crying everyone should be equal, even when they are not.
Re:Excellent news. (Score:5, Insightful)
They achieved dominance because they are the fastest and most comprehensive. That's how they took over the search engine market in the first place. Having the best product usually get's you into market dominance
That's great, and the EU is not having a problem with that at all.
The problem is that they abuse their dominant search engine to try take over other markets (in this particular case, shopping), which is arguably not the best shopping product, but still got ranked higher in the search results.
Re:Excellent news. (Score:4, Insightful)
They achieved dominance because they are the fastest and most comprehensive. That's how they took over the search engine market in the first place. Having the best product usually get's you into market dominance
That's great, and the EU is not having a problem with that at all.
The problem is that they abuse their dominant search engine to try take over other markets (in this particular case, shopping), which is arguably not the best shopping product, but still got ranked higher in the search results.
In other words Google is basically doing what Microsoft did and that caused Slashdot nerds to go nuts and write long angry tirades where Microsoft was spelled with a $ sign. Interestingly now that the boot is on the other foot and Google is the anti competitive monopolist those same people are defending the monopolist with tooth and claw. To me swapping one monopoly for another is nothing more than moving from the fire into the frying pan.
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It's like telling a popular Chinese restaurant that they have to put Italian options up for the shitty restaurant across the street.
You missed the word 'other', even after I took the extra effort to make it bold.
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The law doesn't require you to have a monopoly to be guilty of abusing a monopoly position. It requires you to be dominant.
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Dominance is still not a monopoly
No it's not. A monopoly status is determined by power. Unfortunately dominance naturally provide power. So even though the internet is a theoretically perfect market place where everyone can start a search engine, and everyone is free to search anywhere, the reality is far more nuanced.
When phrases like "Did you Google that using Bing?" make perfect sense you can get an idea of just how incredibly dominant Google's position is and why it can be justifiably determined as a monopoly.
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Dominance is still not a monopoly. They achieved dominance because they are the fastest and most comprehensive. That's how they took over the search engine market in the first place. Having the best product usually get's you into market dominance. That still does not equal a monopoly.
This is the EU crying everyone should be equal, even when they are not.
Monopolies are not illegal. Google is a monopoly and there's no arguing about that.
What Google has done wrong here is using their monopoly position to gain an unfair advantage, in this case to give favourable results to their paying customer's adverts.
The EU are not "crying" that everyone should be equal. You should be really ashamed of yourself for making up something that stupid. What the EU is saying is that everyone needs to start on a level playing field.
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I certainly don't think that's the case. Even if I granted you that at one point that's why they achieved dominance, they maintain dominance due to inertia and using market dominating power.
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The French term is "abus de position dominante", in which case it translates into anything youd do where you're trying to kill off competition by using a large market share. Not the same as a monopoly. /. being more supportive of that particular decision back then...
I believe it is the same laws that got MS fined regarding the IE situation a few years ago. I remember
Re:Excellent news. (Score:5, Informative)
But which law is broken? If they don't have monopoly, they aren't abusing a monopoly.
The law is against abusing a dominant market position. Arguing whether a monopoly has to be absolutely total is irrelevant.
Here's your citation: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal... [europa.eu]
My emphasis in the following:
Article 102
(ex Article 82 TEC)
Any abuse by one or more undertakings of a dominant position within the internal market or in a substantial part of it shall be prohibited as incompatible with the internal market in so far as it may affect trade between Member States.
Such abuse may, in particular, consist in:
(a) directly or indirectly imposing unfair purchase or selling prices or other unfair trading conditions;
(b) limiting production, markets or technical development to the prejudice of consumers;
(c) applying dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;
(d) making the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts.
You are not punished for a monopoly or nearly a monopoly; neither of those things is illegal. They are punished for abusing a dominant market position: being a near-monopoly is one way to have a dominant market position.
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I just got confused that the summery didn't mention the abuse of dominant market position and instead mentioned the irrelevant "near-monopoly".
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I just got confused that the summery didn't mention the abuse of dominant market position and instead mentioned the irrelevant "near-monopoly".
Irrelevant? ...dominant position within the internal market or in a substantial part of it.. and 'near-monopoly' are kind of the same thing.
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Found the DeVry JD.
http://business-law.freeadvice... [freeadvice.com]
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EU law != US law.
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No. Despite the "mono" root, the legal definition is more nuanced than being the only supplier.
In the UK, 25% of the market is the baseline.
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Why would it make you happy?
What Google did wasn't a blatant abuse of power, they just crossed the fuzzy line that was EU law. Laws are rarely black and white. Hence why we need judges, to help see both sides and try to make a fare judgement.
With a high fine like that and google can't talk it down. They may just decide that it is too expensive to do business in Europe, and close its doors there. Laying off European workers, and leaving Europeans to either deal with Bing or Alibaba as a search engine.
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5% is quite a bit. I don't think promoting their shopping service is worth that much.
This is utterly insane (Score:2, Troll)
This fine is moronic on so many levels I'm just cringing in disbelief:
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they don't owe anything to anyone, they are free to show whichever results they want to and deem necessary.
Not according to the law.
How on earth can they abuse their "monopolistic" position if there's none?
They have over 90% market share. That's enough according to the law.
Google is not selling you their search engine
The complaint is that they are using their free search to promote their other businesses over competing businesses.
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Re:This is utterly insane (Score:4, Informative)
how is google showing up in a google search abuse? Will they fine Amazon for having amazon sales show up in amazon search?
Amazon doesn't have market dominance in search, so that's not relevant.
Suppose that 90% of all washing machines sold in the EU were Bosch washing machines. They would have market dominance.
Then, suppose Bosch announced that you would void your warranty unless you used Bosch branded detergent. That would be an abuse of dominant market position - muscling in on the detergent market by leveraging dominance in washing machines.
Google is being accused of muscling in on the price-comparison market by leveraging the dominance in internet website search.
Imagine if Google decided to get into the used car business, an all of a sudden searches for "used 2010 Hondo Civic" returned results from Google dealers at the top, and other dealers a surprisingly long way down. That would be seen by many as abuse of market position.
You could argue that in a free market, people will just stop using Google to search, and will start looking for new cars in Bing, and order will be restored to the world. Many people in Europe have less faith in the market's ability to just correct these sorts of things.
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That and people don't go to Amazon to search for non-Amazon sources of a product.
Re:This is utterly insane (Score:4, Informative)
Many people in Europe have less faith in the market's ability to just correct these sorts of things.
And there are plenty of examples in the US, where the markets don't correct. The topic of crappy internet providers is almost a weekly item here.
Is Google forced down anyone's throat? (Score:5, Insightful)
Google "denied other companies the chance to compete" and left consumers without "genuine choice."
We should start right there. Who forces anyone to use Google in the first place?
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Who forces anyone to use Google in the first place?
Nobody, but that's not relevant according to the law, which only looks at dominance (over 90% market share), not force.
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Nobody, but that's not relevant according to the law, which only looks at dominance (over 90% market share), not force.
So, what's the threshold? 85%? 80%? 40%? Do we know?
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There's no fixed threshold. The dominance is determined by the court, based on multiple criteria. A 40% market share may be considered dominant, if competitors are all much smaller, the barrier to entry is high, or if the company is an unavoidable trading partner.
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There's no fixed threshold. The dominance is determined by the court, based on multiple criteria. A 40% market share may be considered dominant, if competitors are all much smaller, the barrier to entry is high, or if the company is an unavoidable trading partner.
I feel like there's non-competitive environment for how all nations in the EU should be run and that it feel like the EU Parliament and Commission have a complete monopoly over how it should be ruled.
We need to break it up and make it easier for smaller people like me to influence it.
Re:Is Google forced down anyone's throat? (Score:4, Informative)
One could argue that "it's not Googles fault that they make a better product than the consumer", and that is true.
The commission if fining Google because:
- Consumers(stupidly/naively) believe that Google is showing the results that are most relevant to the customer
- Google is NOT doing that
If you search for "cheap shoes", the searcher/customer has a right to expect that they get a fair representation of the best(most relevant) sites that sell cheap shoes.
Google does NOT do this...
- They will sneakily put links to their own store, with out any indication that it is essentially an advert for their own product/store.
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Who forces anyone to use Google in the first place?
What's the alternative? Bing? hahahah
No seriously, that is kind of my point. When there is a primary search engine and alternatives are actively mocked, users of alternatives are actively mocked, and alternatives despite a massive amount of funding and resources behind them have poor market share, then you are in a defacto monopoly.
Monopoly status is not dependent on someone's ability to easily switch to an alternative, but rather the actual possibility that they would if the alternatives exist. Quite frank
Re:Is Google forced down anyone's throat? (Score:4, Informative)
Google "denied other companies the chance to compete" and left consumers without "genuine choice."
We should start right there. Who forces anyone to use Google in the first place?
What forces me to use Google is the fact that they have the best searches which is to a large extent due to the fact that they have something like 78% of the global market share which in turn is a large part of the reason they are able to deliver such good searches in the first place although Google would like you to believe that it's exclusively due to the fact that their search algorithm is light years more advanced than that those of the competition. Mind you I usually try to use other search engines first, mainly because I'm a compulsive windmill jouster who loathes monopolies or near monopolies in any form, but I all to often end up going back to Google much to my annoyance because I think Google is in desperate need of some truly fierce competition (mind you Bing has been gradually getting better over the years it's just been slooooow going). What makes or breaks a search engine is not giving good results on the 20-30% of searches on very popular and therefore extremely common searches like 'big titties' it's the ability to deliver good results on the 70-80% of searches on very specific/esoteric topics like: 'error LNK2001 unresolved symbol', 'install a performance air filter on a Moto Guzzi bike', 'the silver economy in dark age Europe', 'carrot beer' or 'vegan spinach ice cream' (and yes, the last two really are a thing, just not terribly popular). Its a kind of like the chicken or the egg causality dilemma, the more traffic an engine gets the more accurate the search results get and the quicker it is able to deliver them but if your engine is only getting 3% of the traffic, Bing is getting 20% and Google is hogging the rest you're in for an up hill struggle with your search engine startup unless you get lucky and come up with a quantum leap in search technology like Google did and contrary to what you may believe those don't grow on trees. In the mean time monopolies or near monopolies are never a good thing even if the monopolist is Google.
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What forces me to use Google is the fact that they have the best searches which is to a large extent due to the fact that they have something like 78% of the global market share which in turn is a large part of the reason they are able to deliver such good searches in the first place although Google would like you to believe that it's exclusively due to the fact that their search algorithm is light years more advanced than that those of the competition.
It's easily forgotten that Google's dominance developed because their algorithms in fact were light years more advanced than those of the competition. At that time we also had Hotbot/Inktomi and Altavista. We stopped using them specifically because their search results lacked relevance, while Google's kept getting better.
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The default is a powerful motivator. Most phones have Google as the default search engine. Most people seem to have Google as their default desktop search engine due to it being the default in Chrome and Firefox or their company.
That's why the EU didn't use the word "force", as you did. They are saying that being the default gives Google something of a monopoly, as seen by the proportion of traffic they get compared to other search engines and price comparison sites. The EU expects companies in a monopoly p
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Their competitors. I mean, have you tried Bing?
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Who forces anyone to use Google in the first place?
Consumers are forcing retailers to use Google.
Your confusion is stemming from the fact that you're thinking of this backwards: you're approaching it from the consumer side, rather than the retailer side. Consumers have free choice in regards to what search engine they use, but the fact that 90% of them have chosen Google means that stores have no choice. They are forced to advertise through Google if they want to stay in business. European law dictates that companies cannot use their dominance in one market
That's got google's attention! (Score:3)
Once upon a time a European country making a fuss about anything was yawn worthy for a large, multinational corporation.
Here's a $2.7 billion fine - that time of regulatory commissions having no teeth is over.
I know I know...when the UK leaves the EU it can have it's fat politicians bribed for peanuts in comparison and bent over by such a large company also because it will be desperate for tax revenue...but for now let's enjoy the regulatory muscle provided by "unelected officials".
Available only in certain countries? (Score:2)
I live in Finland which is part of EU. I haven't even heard about this Google Shopping before. Is this feature shown only in some countries?
I tried disabling ad blocker and still couldn't get anything like that to appear. I even googled for "Google Shopping" and while the main page of it loads, it doesn't show any products when I try to click some of the categories or when I try to search products.
It is there, just subtle (Score:2)
Say you are in the mood to buy a new chair. You go and google 'chair price' or something like that. Several options show up. As it turns out, google favors companies that sell chairs and pay for google advertising. They may not be the most famous company, the best reviewed company, etc. but they will get top billing.
When confronted with a long list, human nature is such that you choose something near the top. We are all lazy and who wants to read that much unn
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Google understands EU red tape. (Score:2)
Hm (Score:3, Insightful)
One might almost infer that the EU is anti business, or ...anti non-EU business, or...(if one really has the tinfoil hat) anti-US-business.
Trump's a buffoon for wanting to raise protectionist barriers, but the EU deep-pocket-fining US businesses mainly for being successful (particularly in fields where EU businesses are struggling or don't exist) is *just* as stupid.
Hey, I guess it's one way to raise the funds to bail out the monetary union, once the German taxpayers ever get tired of footing the bill for the whole damned thing, right?
Hint: turns out you can't simply bolt the Drachma (or the Lira, or the Peseta) to the Deutsche Mark and get ... a Deutsche Mark. Funny, that.
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Monopolies aren't illegal. Its abusing your dominant position that's illegal (like using your monopoly on search results to push your other products above those of your competitors).
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The EU doesn't sell a shopping service so what the fuck are you talking about?
Re:Free healthcare (Score:5, Informative)
'Cut a check' is a long established idiom. Welcome to English.
No that's American. In English it's cheque
(ducks)!
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Limeys don't cut checks, they bounce them.
a bit like your president [esquire.com] ;-)
Re:In before (Score:4)
Well it isn't a monopoly. We have Microsoft Bing as a search alternative. If Google Were to go out of business and close its doors, They are companies and services that could pick right up.
EU doesn't always attack US Companies. However it would be naive to think that the EU won't take care of its self interests before a non member countries.
Free market to an extent is still needed otherwise the push to innovate will diminish. European built products are normally known for its quality, however not for its innovation. So when a brand new game changer innovation comes out from an other country, US, Japan, China, India... Europe tends to get very defensive about it, until they can make their much nicer version of it.
But where is the European Premium Google alternative? China has Alibaba.
Ride the Hypocrisy Train: Woot Woot (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot Community: Preach to me sister! Mod that dude up to the sky!!!!!!!!!!!
Trump: It is stupid for America to continually enter one sided trade deals where the other country uses protectionism, and our companies get savaged. We need to start thinking of America first and use protections when they do.
Slashdot Community: Trump and ALL his ideas are evil, even if it matches conventional wisdom on these forums. Mod anyone down who agrees with him, and kill their pets too!!!!!!
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Well it isn't a monopoly. We have Microsoft Bing as a search alternative.
The existence of an alternative doesn't define a monopoly. Market power does. Bing has a horrendously low market share given the marketing power behind it. People don't use it just because it's there and that gives google a great deal of power. Even the name of the search engine is used as a verb. Let's not pretend that users won't put up with an incredible amount of abuse before changing especially given Google search's integration with other services and devices.
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Germany is a founding member of the EU (and it's predecessors). There is no general anti-EU sentiment in Germany. Germany is one of the least-likely candidates to leave the EU.
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Germans know very well how their bread is buttered: all those crappy southern European countries depress the value of the Euro to the benefit of German exports. Leaving the EU and returning to the DM will quickly see their currency appreciate.
Anyway, your comments are totally out of touch with the reality on the ground. Despite frustration with the likes of Greece and the recent appearance of parties like the AfD and Pegida, most Germans view the EU very favourably and don't understand this whole stupid B
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They can't create anything, so they punish those who do. Sad to see the self-appointed "civilization-bringing continent" (as they declare in their ludicrous "constitution") stoop so low. They must be desperate.
They can't create anything? How about the printing press, the first technology that allowed mass distribution of information. The steam engine that powered the industrial revolution. Radio, that allowed information to be transmitted literally across oceans without connecting wires, and to ships. Penicillin, the first antibiotic. Asepsis, that reduced infections after surgery. The balloon, the first tethered balloon, and the first sustained flight of a human using another balloon. The first working telegrap