The Mercury

BUSINESS OF ONLINE SHOPPING

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TECH GIANT HEEDS EU ORDER

GOOGLE is complying with an EU order to boost competitio­n in online shopping, Europe’s antitrust chief said yesterday, brushing aside complaints from rivals demanding more regulatory action. Hit with a €2.4 billion (R38.57bn) fine two years ago for unfairly promoting its own comparison shopping service, Google has since offered to allow competitor­s to bid for advertisin­g space at the top of a search page, giving them the chance to compete on equal terms. European Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said the measure appeared to be working. “Now we are in a situation where in 75 percent of queries there would be at least one rival to Google in the shopping box and 40 percent of clicks would go to a merchant hosted by one of the rivals,” Vestager told reporters on the sidelines of a Centre for European Reform event. “This means we do not have a non-compliance case, but at the same time it also means that we keep monitoring monthly developmen­ts,” she pointed out. Open Internet Project, a Google critic, however argues that the situation has not improved. “By putting these Googlepowe­red shopping units at the top of every relevant results page, above more relevant comparison services, Google continues to reserve the important market for comparison shopping services to itself,” Open Internet Project pointed out in a statement last week. I Reuters

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