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Google Businesses Technology

Google To Test Maps Removal in EU Hotel Search Amid Antitrust Pressure (reuters.com) 26

Google announced additional modifications to its European search results on Tuesday, following complaints from smaller competitors about traffic losses and amid potential EU antitrust charges under new tech regulations. The changes come as Google attempts to comply with the Digital Markets Act, which prohibits tech giants from favoring their own services and after hotels, airlines, and small retailers reported a 30% decline in direct booking clicks following recent platform adjustments.

Google's legal director Oliver Bethell said the new proposals include expanded search units offering equal formatting between comparison sites and supplier websites, along with new formats for competitors to display prices and images. The company will also test removing hotel map displays in Germany, Belgium, and Estonia. The Alphabet unit faces possible enforcement action from the European Commission, which began investigating potential DMA violations in March. Companies found breaching the regulations could face fines of up to 10% of their annual global revenue.

Google To Test Maps Removal in EU Hotel Search Amid Antitrust Pressure

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  • by jriding ( 1076733 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2024 @12:27PM (#64973817)

    And why can't we in the us have laws like this?
    Or would that be somehow too anti corporate.
    The right to be forgotten, I laughed at because of the name at the time.
    Now I dream of a day they can't just hose up all our information and resell it because I purchased anything.

    • Answering your rhetorical questions:

      Because the lottery winners in America can too easily bribe the cheapest politicians to rig the games in their favor.

      My rhetorical questions on the monopoly topic:

      Can customers select from real alternatives?

      Can wannabe competitors enter the market?

      Finishing the joke with a solution approach: If the answer to one of my questions is "No", then the monopolist's tax rate on profits should go up.

      [I like the FP, even though it was mostly rhetorical, but I changed the Subject be

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2024 @12:33PM (#64973827)

    Extending this out a bit suggests that every business has the potential to be removed from Google maps thus making mapping totally useless.
    Or am I missing something?

    • I don't think you're missing anything. Removing the maps from motel listings - how is this a good thing? Make it harder to find things. Get people more lost than they already are? Next they'll remove the listings from the maps. Then for each motel, you have to know the motel is there, get the address, type it into the search bar, and it'll show you the motel. But if there's a motel across the street, you have to know it's there before typing its name into the search bar.

      Back to the AAA tour guid

      • Re:Beg pardon? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Holi ( 250190 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2024 @12:57PM (#64973889)

        Google loves their malicious compliance. It's one way they like to bully governments.

        • What is the exact solution that was proposed by these countries regarding hotel mapping? From what I read there was only a complaint with no remedy proposed. Google saying we will go back to blue links like we used to do when it wasn't an issue, is now an issue. These countries should mandate a solution instead of just complaining. Likewise, what exact solution do you propose solves the problem equally for all sides and all countries?

          • EU do have their own maps. Google map isn't the only one in the world. Many would be complaining if every children playgrounds, with reviews, ratings, live webcam, etc appear on Google map for the predators. Facebook likely already have an app for that.
      • I don't think you're missing anything. Removing the maps from motel listings - how is this a good thing? Make it harder to find things.

        No, it's just as easy to find something. You just have to select an appropriate booking site, rather than relying on your search engine provider and maps provider also being a middleman and kingmaker - you're holiday at the whim of one company. Easy = others making decisions for you. Easy != good.

  • No surprise, the headline is terrible. The article makes only one brief mention about maps - Google potentially not showing a map beneath search results for things like hotels and the like. All that will do is make it harder and less convenient for users to find what they're looking for.

    The crux of the story is that Google has already made changes to their search results to meet the new EU legal requirements. Now European business are pissed because their traffic is already down 30%.

    [Google] has since then tried to address conflicting demands from price-comparison sites, hotels, airlines and small retailers, among others The latter three groups said their direct booking clicks have fallen by 30% due to recent Google changes.

    So this is what happens

Where are the calculations that go with a calculated risk?

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