Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Other Google services at risk in EU

Shopping-search slap portends wider scrutiny, analysts say

- GASPARD SEBAG

Google’s record $2.7 billion antitrust fine is just the start of a new phase in the company’s seven-year tussle with the European Union’s antitrust arm, analysts said.

EU competitio­n chief Margrethe Vestager warned Tuesday that the clampdown on Google’s shopping-search service sets a “precedent” that could be used to scrutinize the search-engine giant’s behavior in other areas.

“The shopping reasoning applied to other services would totally impact Google’s business model,” said Ombline Ancelin, a lawyer at Simmons & Simmons in Paris. The decision means other specialize­d “vertical” Google search services such as maps, travel and restaurant reviews are effectivel­y “on parole,” she added.

Vestager said Google unfairly skewed its general search results to thwart smaller comparison-shopping services. Under threat of further fines, Alphabet Inc.’s Google has 90 days to “stop its illegal conduct” and to give equal treatment to rival price-comparison services.

But the EU also said its shopping decision “is a precedent which establishe­s the framework for the assessment of the legality of this type of conduct,” cautioning that each situation — whether it be maps or Google images — would require a case-specific analysis to account for the characteri­stics of each market.

“All of the businesses closely connected to search must be at risk,” said Matthew Hall, a lawyer at McGuireWoo­ds in Brussels. Still, he said that

Google’s victory last year in a U.K. court case concerning mapping service Streetmap shows that “all is not always lost.”

Google lawyer Kent Walker said in a blog post that “given the evidence, we respectful­ly disagree” with the EU findings.

Vestager’s Google decision is a landmark in the seven-year investigat­ion fueled by complaints from small comparison­shopping websites as well as bigger names, including News Corp., Axel Springer and Microsoft. Companies that helped trigger the inquiry will make their presence felt as Google tries to comply with the EU’s order.

Thomas Vinje, a lawyer for the FairSearch, a lobbying group that helped organize the legal challenge to Google in Europe and includes Oracle Corp. and TripAdviso­r Inc., said his clients “will seek interactio­n with the commission” to evaluate what Google offers and assess whether it makes a difference to price-comparison sites.

In addition to possible exposure in relation to maps and other services, the searchengi­ne giant may face more immediate enforcemen­t after

being accused of antitrust breaches in relation to its Android mobile-phone software, bundled for free with Search and other Google services on handsets, and the AdSense online advertisin­g platform.

Jonas Koponen, a lawyer at Linklaters in Brussels, believes that the shopping decision will give the EU extra impetus for both cases.

“The EU’s identifica­tion of ‘super-dominance’ in Internet search throughout the European economic area is confirmed and will provide a cornerston­e for assessment of other ongoing cases, especially regarding Android and AdSense,” according to Koponen.

Online travel companies welcomed the EU’s decision.

“Google’s conduct is significan­tly impacting on competitio­n in the travel vertical, the single largest of the vertical search markets, at the expense of consumers and of Google’s competitor­s,” said Christoph Klenner, who represents Priceline Group, Expedia, TripAdviso­r and Ctrip.com Internatio­nal as head of the European Technology & Travel Services Associatio­n.

Google has slowly encroached on the travel-booking companies’ territory, making it easier to search for flights and hotels without going to sites like Expedia, Booking.com or

Kayak.com. At the same time, the travel companies remain among Google’s largest customers, spending billions on search advertisem­ents to drive travelers to their own websites.

Ancelin of the law firm in Paris said the overall message sent Tuesday doesn’t bode well for Google or other technology giants.

“There seems to be a clear desire to get to the bottom of things and issue fines,” Ancelin said. “Vestager chose to take a strong position and doesn’t seem open to negotiatio­n.”

 ?? Bloomberg News/MICHAEL SHORT ?? Attendees listen during a keynote speech last month at the Google I/O annual developers conference in Mountain View, Calif.
Bloomberg News/MICHAEL SHORT Attendees listen during a keynote speech last month at the Google I/O annual developers conference in Mountain View, Calif.

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