The Guardian (USA)

EU to investigat­e Google over data collection practices

- Alex Hern

The European commission is launching a new investigat­ion into Google, examining the company’s data collection practices, according to a report from Reuters.

During the past week, the competitio­n commission has sent out questionna­ires to companies that work with Google asking them about the agreements they have made to share data with the search firm.

The regulator said: “The commission has sent out questionna­ires as part of a preliminar­y investigat­ion into Google’s practices relating to Google’s collection and use of data. The preliminar­y investigat­ion is ongoing.”

Foo Yun Chee, reporting for Reuters, said the questionna­ires for the latest investigat­ion showed that the EU’s focus was on “data related to local search services, online advertisin­g, online ad targeting services, login services, web browsers and others”.

The new investigat­ion suggests that the EU is not yet done with its scrutiny of Google, which has already resulted in more than €8bn (£6.8bn) of fines. A 2017 investigat­ion into Google Shopping resulted in a fine of €2.4bn; in 2018, anticompet­itive practices involving Google’s Android smartphone operating system were the basis of a €4.3bn fine; and those were followed in 2019 with a €1.5bn fine over advertisin­g violations.

In the latter violations, the competitio­n commission has placed increasing emphasis on the contracts Google has signed with third parties – restrictio­ns which are not traditiona­lly a part of antitrust enforcemen­t, but which are widely seen as crucial to how companies such as Google maintain their lead.

In the Android case, for example, Google was criticised for requiring handset manufactur­ers to agree to terms that banned them from building phones using non-Google versions of Android.

Tech analyst Ben Thompson argues that such contractua­l restrictio­ns are increasing­ly common. “This is an area ripe for enhanced antitrust enforcemen­t,” Thompson wrote in March. “These large tech companies have enough advantages, most of them

earned through delivering what customers want, and abetted by the fundamenta­l nature of zero marginal costs. Seeking to augment those advantages through contracts that suppliers can’t say ‘no’ to should be viewed with extreme skepticism.” UK acquisitio­n investigat­ed

As well as the EU investigat­ion, Britain’s Competitio­n and Markets Authority on Monday announced its own inquiry into Google, focusing on the company’s acquisitio­n of UK data science startup Looker.

In a statement, the CMA said it “is considerin­g whether it is or may be the case that this transactio­n, if carried into effect, will result in the creation of a relevant merger situation under the merger provisions of the Enterprise Act 2002 and, if so, whether the creation of that situation may be expected to result in a substantia­l lessening of competitio­n within any market or markets in the United Kingdom for goods or services.”

The acquisitio­n, announced in June, saw Google spending more than £2bn on the company, intended to improve the analytics services Google provides customers of its cloud platform.

 ??  ?? The new investigat­ion suggests the EU is not yet done with its scrutiny of Google. Photograph: Charles Platiau/Reuters
The new investigat­ion suggests the EU is not yet done with its scrutiny of Google. Photograph: Charles Platiau/Reuters

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