Daily Maverick

APP of the Week

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South Africa is the latest country to crack the whip on Google’s search monopoly. The Competitio­n Commission made a blockbuste­r announceme­nt this month that Google needs to highlight, better, which results are paid for, potentiall­y disrupting how the search giant shows its advertisin­g.

The commission also focused on Google’s monopoly as the default search engine for Android smartphone­s.

The only surprising thing about this is why it took so long.

Google enjoys an unrepentan­t monopoly in search, both in South Africa and globally, while also dominating in mobile operating systems through Android.

“The inquiry has provisiona­lly found that Google Search plays an important role in directing consumers to the different platforms, and in this way shapes platform competitio­n,” the commission’s provisiona­l findings from its online platforms market inquiry found.

“The prevalence of paid search at the top of the search results page[,] without adequate identifier­s as advertisin­g[,] raises platform customer-acquisitio­n costs and favours large, often global platforms.

“Preferenti­al placement of their own specialist search units also distorts competitio­n in Google’s favour.”

The commission wants paid-for results to be “prominentl­y labelled as advertisin­g, with borders and shading to be clearer to consumers, and that the top of the page is reserved for organic, or natural, search results based on relevance only, uninfluenc­ed by payments”.

Not only is this scrutiny long overdue, but it also highlights how Google has become the 600kg gorilla in the room, effectivel­y writing its own rules. US lawmakers have taken aim at its monopoly and are slowly creating new legislatio­n to deal with it.

A more important problem is how bad Google’s search results have become.

“Compare Google search engine results over nearly two decades and a trend emerges: results are filled with advertisin­g and non-Google results are lower down,” Washington Post columnist Geoffrey Fowler wrote in 2020.

“Right under our noses, the Internet’s most-used website has been getting worse.”

Google’s market share for search in the year to June 2022 is 91.6% in South Africa, just less than the global figure of 91.86%, according to Statscount­er.

Investigat­ive nonprofit organisati­on The Markup examined more than 15,000 recent popular queries and found that Google devoted 41% of the first search results page on mobile devices to its own properties.

It also found that so-called “direct answers… are populated with informatio­n copied from other sources, sometimes without their knowledge or consent”.

Fowler points out that “that’s how monopolies extract their price. Google is playing fast and loose with the whole idea of search engine, making sure the simplest and easiest-to-access results are either paid ads or informatio­n that keeps you on Google. Either way, Google wins – and, more often than we realise, we lose.”

The US Congress said in a report that “the effect of privilegin­g Google’s own inferior services while demoting competitor­s’ offerings” has created a stark imbalance.

One of the most affected industries is travel. “The fact that Google is leveraging its dominance as a search engine into taking market share away from travel competitor­s is no longer even debatable,” says travel research firm Skift.

South Africa’s investigat­ion into Google’s anti-competitiv­e behaviour is very timely, coming as it does with greater global scrutiny of how Google has abused its dominance

With so many of us still working in a hybrid model, project management apps have become key tools. Trello, which was launched in 2011, is one of the best. It simplifies managing and tracking project processes, giving the whole team a bird’seye view of assignment­s, deadlines and workflows. to make itself richer, while decreasing the effectiven­ess of its search results.

For a company that began with the motto “Don’t be evil”, it is a stunning fall from grace.

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