EU To Google: Good Dog, Now Fetch!

Posted: 2012/07/25 in Education / Awareness, Enforcement, Legislation, New Business Models, Public Policy, Stats / reports

The EU hailed on Tuesday proposals that Google has made after regulators launched an anti-trust probe into whether the Internet search giant had abused its dominant market position.

“The (executive European) Commission considers Google’s proposals as a good basis for further talks and has now reached a good level of understanding with Google,” said a spokesman for Joaquin Almunia, the commissioner responsible for competition.

“There will soon be discussions at technical level,” the spokesman said. “We hope this process will lead to remedies addressing our concerns.” The statement came a day before Almunia was to hold a press conference in Brussels.

A Google spokesman in Brussells, Al Verney, said: “We continue to work cooperatively with the European Commission.” Google made its proposals in early July following a demand by EU antitrust officials in May to quickly respond to commission concerns. At the time, the FairSearch coalition, which includes Microsoft and several airfare comparison websites, said it hoped the letter signals a change by Google.

“We hope the proposals reflect a greater willingness to end Google’s anti-competitive behaviour than has its consistent rejection of the concerns that Mr. Almunia identified after collecting evidence for nearly two years,” said Thomas Vinje, EU counsel to the FairSearch coalition.

The European Commission launched its antitrust investigation in November 2010, looking into allegations that Google had abused a dominant market position following complaints from rivals. Almunia said in May that the probe had identified areas of significant concern in Brussels.

They were: “preferential treatment” in the hierarchical presentation of search results; doubts over Google’s full respect of copyrights; and “restrictions” written into advertising contracts and the “portability” of advertising across different Internet platforms.

Microsoft-owned Internet portal Ciao was an early complainant and more than a dozen plaintiffs are now attached to the case. If satisfied with Google’s response, the Commission could close this investigation.

More:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jNjEk2IOa8RV5Y164JX9b90d3qVg?docId=CNG.199264795d5196683aa8563ae79b7a6e.201

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