The Mercury News

Google loses EU appeal over $2.8 billion

Search giant was fined in landmark antitrust ruling

- By Adam Satariano

In a major ruling that bolsters the European Union’s efforts to clamp down on the world’s largest technology companies, Google lost an appeal Wednesday to overturn a landmark antitrust ruling by European regulators against the internet giant.

The decision by the Luxembourg-based General Court related to a 2017 decision by the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch, to fine Google about $2.8 billion for giving preferenti­al treatment to its own price-comparison shopping service over rival services.

The penalty was the first of three issued by Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission’s top antitrust enforcer, against Google. And with the other cases also being appealed — and additional European investigat­ions underway against Amazon, Apple and Facebook — the case has been closely watched as a signal of the court’s view of the European Commission’s aggressive use of antitrust law against American tech giants.

Google can appeal the decision to the EU’s highest court, the European Court of Justice.

Amid increasing support for regulating large tech platforms in the United States and European Union, courts will play a central role in determinin­g just how far government­s will be able to go when intervenin­g in the digital economy. In the United States, Google is facing a Justice Department lawsuit for anticompet­itive behavior, and Facebook is facing another from the Federal Trade Commission.

In Europe, the courts have sometimes ruled against regulators. Last year, the General Court ruled against an order to require Apple to pay 13 billion euros in unpaid taxes. Amazon also successful­ly appealed another order to repay taxes.

In its ruling against Google on Wednesday, the court said, “By favoring its own comparison shopping service on its general results pages through more favorable display and positionin­g, while relegating the results from competing comparison services in those pages by means of ranking algorithms, Google departed from competitio­n on the merits.”

Google said it was reviewing the decision but added that it had already made a number of changes to its shopping product to comply with the 2017 decision.

“Shopping ads have always helped people find the products they are looking for quickly and easily, and helped merchants to reach potential customers,” the company said in a statement. “Our approach has worked successful­ly for more than

three years, generating billions of clicks for more than 700 comparison shopping services.”

The 2.4 billion-euro fine was a record at the time, before being surpassed in 2018, when the commission fined Google 4.34 billion euros for illegally using the Android operating system to bolster the use of its search engine and other services on mobile devices.

In 2019, Vestager’s office fined Google 1.49 billion euros for imposing unfair terms on companies that used its search bar on their websites in Europe.

The investigat­ions of Google helped inspire stiffer new competitio­n rules that are being drafted in the European Union that target the world’s largest technology platforms. The draft law the Digital Markets Act is expected to be adopted next year and would give European regulators new powers to intervene in the digital economy, including blocking companies like Google and Apple from giving their services preferenti­al treatment over rivals.

Violating the new rules would result in fines of up to 10% of a company’s annual revenue.

Google’s competitor­s welcomed Wednesday’s ruling, but many said the investigat­ions and court hearings had taken so long that Google had been able to further entrench its dominant position.

“While we welcome today’s judgment, it does not undo the considerab­le consumer and anti-competitiv­e harm caused by more than a decade of Google’s insidious search manipulati­on practices,” said Shivaun Raff, CEO and co-founder of Foundem, a comparison shopping service in Europe that helped bring the original complaint against Google.

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