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Google faces fresh EU showdown as rivals attack search giant's response to record fine

Google was fined €2.4bn in June - Anadolu
Google was fined €2.4bn in June - Anadolu

Google is facing a new battle in Brussels as its opponents gear up to challenge the internet behemoth’s “inadequate” response to a record monopoly fine.

Several of Google’s rivals have held meetings with Margrethe Vestager, Europe’s competition commissioner, in recent weeks to express their dismay at the changes made to Google’s results in response to last summer’s fine.

They are preparing to lodge formal complaints in the coming weeks. If successful, the company could be forced to pay further multi-billion euro fines, or make further changes to its search results.

After a seven-year investigation, the European Commission hit Google with a €2.4bn (£2.1bn) penalty in June, saying it had taken advantage of its search engine monopoly to promote its online shopping service at the expense of smaller price comparison websites.

As part of the fine, Google was told to alter its search results to create a level playing field, and in September began allowing rival services to compete against Google Shopping for advertising “slots” in its search results.

Competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager - Credit: AP
Competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager Credit: AP

However, the changes have been condemned by price comparison websites, which say it has done nothing to take power out of Google’s hands.

They say Google’s remedy has been inadequate because it continues to place its shopping service at an advantage in search results. Although Google Shopping must now bid against rivals for paid-for positions in search, opponents say the auction is not fair, since Google is merely moving money from one part of the company to another.

Richard Stables, of price comparison site Kelkoo, said that 99pc of slots for shopping search results are still held by Google, showing the changes have done little to bolster competition.

“We’re getting literally no volume, the solution is not fit for purpose,” Mr Stables said. He is one of a number of critics urging Ms Vestager to force further concessions from Google. Foundem, the price comparison site that complained about Google eight years ago, is also understood to have held talks with the commissioner.

Google v EU timeline
Google v EU timeline

The commission is due to release a 200-page “prohibition decision” report into the fine in the coming weeks., which could lead to host of formal complaints from price comparison sites. Google is also due to file its first assessment of the changes with the commission at the end of January.

The company is on probation with the European Commission, which has enlisted KPMG and search engine experts Mavens to monitor its compliance. If Google is found to be flouting the order, it can be fined up to 5pc of its daily turnover, around $4.5bn (£3.5bn) a year, for the period in question. In September, Google appealed against the fine.

A Google spokesman said: “The remedy we have implemented complies with the European Commission’s order. Comparison shopping services now have the same opportunity as Google Shopping to show shopping ads from merchants on Google’s Search results pages.”