EU fines Google record $2.7
billion in first antitrust case
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[June 27, 2017]
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - EU antitrust
regulators hit Alphabet unit Google with a record 2.42-billion-euro
($2.7 billion) fine on Tuesday, taking a tough line in the first of
three investigations into the company's dominance in searches and
smartphones.
It is the biggest fine the EU has ever imposed on a single company in an
antitrust case, exceeding a 1.06-billion-euro sanction handed down to
U.S. chipmaker Intel in 2009.
The European Commission said the world's most popular internet search
engine has 90 days to stop favoring its own shopping service or face a
further penalty per day of up to 5 percent of Alphabet's average daily
global turnover.
The fine, equivalent to 3 percent of Alphabet's turnover, is the biggest
regulatory setback for Google, which settled with U.S. enforcers in 2013
without a penalty after agreeing to change some of its search practices.
The EU competition enforcer has also charged Google with using its
Android mobile operating system to crush rivals, a case that could
potentially be the most damaging for the company, with the system used
in most smartphones.
The company has also been accused of blocking rivals in online search
advertising.
The Commission found that Google, with a market share in searches of
over 90 percent in most European countries, had systematically given
prominent placement in searches to its own comparison shopping service
and demoted those of rivals in search results.
"What Google has done is illegal under EU antitrust rules. It denied
other companies the chance to compete on the merits and to innovate. And
most importantly, it denied European consumers a genuine choice of
services and the full benefits of innovation," European Competition
Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.
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European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager holds a news
conference at the EU Commission's headquarters in Brussels, Belgium
June 27, 2017. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir
Google said its data showed people preferred links taking them directly to
products they want and not to websites where they have to repeat their search.
"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," Kent Walker, Google's general counsel,
said in a statement.
The action follows a seven-year investigation prompted by scores of complaints
from rivals such as U.S. consumer review website Yelp, TripAdvisor, UK price
comparison site Foundem, News Corp and lobbying group FairSearch.
The penalty payment for failure to comply would amount to around $12 million a
day based on Alphabet's 2016 turnover of $90.3 billion. The Commission did not
specify what changes Google had to make.
"This decision is a game-changer. The Commission confirmed that consumers do not
see what is most relevant for them on the world’s most used search engine but
rather what is best for Google," said Monique Goyens, director general of EU
consumer group BEUC.
Thomas Vinje, legal counsel to FairSearch, welcomed the Commission's findings
and urged it to act on Google's Android mobile operating system following its
2013 complaint that Google restricted competition in software running on mobile
devices.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Philip Blenkinsop and Jason Neely)
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