The Sun (Malaysia)

Google appeals against India watchdog’s ruling

> US tech giant found guilty of ‘search bias’, fined 1.36 billion rupees

-

NEW DELHI: Online search giant Google has filed an appeal at the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) against a judgement from India’s competitio­n watchdog that found it guilty of “search bias”, two sources aware of the matter told Reuters.

The appeal was filed on Monday, one of the sources said.

In February, the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) imposed a 1.36 billion rupees (RM80.9 million) fine on Google, saying it was abusing its dominance in online web search and online search advertisin­g markets.

Google, the core unit of US firm Alphabet Inc, did not immediatel­y respond to a Reuters request for comment.

A CCI official said that its judgement was “robust” and that the competitio­n watchdog plans to defend its verdict at the NCLAT.

“Google was found to be indulging in practices of search bias and by doing so, it causes harm to its competitor­s as well as to users,” the CCI said in its 190-page judgement.

The Indian watchdog’s judgement is the latest anti-trust setback for the world’s most popular search engine. Last year, the European Commission imposed a record 2.4 billion (RM11.4 billion) fine on the company for favouring its shopping service and demoting rival offerings. Google has appealed against the verdict.

In India, the Commission found that Google, through its search design, had placed its commercial flight search function at a prominent position on the search results page to the

disadvanta­ge of businesses trying to gain market access.

The CCI ruling brought to an end a probe first started by the watchdog in 2012 on complaints filed by matchmakin­g website Bharat Matrimony and a not-for-profit organisati­on, Consumer Unity and Trust Society. – Reuters

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia