The
European Union will accuse Google on Wednesday of abusing its dominant
position in Internet searches, opening the U.S. tech company up to a
risk of massive fines and enforced changes in its business model, the
Financial Times and Wall Street Journal said on Tuesday.
However,
two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that a formal
antitrust charge sheet will not be ready for Wednesday and could take
several more months to draw up. The EU can impose fines of up to 10
percent of global turnover, or more than $6 billion in penalties in
Google’s case.
An
EU official said Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager would make
an important announcement about Google on Wednesday, after the EU’s
executive holds its weekly meeting.
The
Commission’s chief spokesman would not confirm the reports, which cited
EU officials, but said there would be a news conference around noon
(1000 GMT) after the meeting.
Vestager,
who had indicated she would not be rushed into a decision on the
five-year-old case, is due to fly to the United States later on
Wednesday for a high-profile working visit. Americans, including
business leaders and President Barack Obama, have questioned EU efforts
to curb the power of U.S. tech companies.
The
Danish liberal will accuse Google of breaching competition law by
diverting traffic from rivals to favour its own services, said the FT,
adding that some fellow commissioners had been concerned Vestager was
narrowing the probe.
In
an internal memo published by blog Re/code, Google acknowledged the
“disappointing news” and said the process would include a back and forth
over European Commission concerns that could take a year or two and
eventually land in court.
“We
have a very strong case, with especially good arguments when it comes
to better services for users and increased competition,” the memo said.
Google declined to comment or confirm that the memo was genuine.
The
possibility of an early announcement of action against Google was made
public earlier this week by Guenther Oettinger, the conservative German
commissioner for the digital economy, who has been a sharp critic of
Google and has spoken up for the interests of European technology and
publishing companies.
Separately,
Vestager will launch an investigation into Google’s Android mobile
software business, the FT said. Google in the internal memo said it had a
strong case on Android since the operating system had lowered prices
and increased choices for consumers.
The
Commission has been laying the groundwork for a case centred on whether
Google abuses the dominant market share of Android to promote its own
services.
Vestager
made the decision to go ahead with charges on Tuesday together with
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and will inform her
colleagues on Wednesday, the Journal said. In office since November,
Juncker’s executive has put the fostering of Europe’s digital economy
and free trade with the United States among its priorities, but some EU
officials are concerned U.S. companies are choking European competitors.
Vestager
has narrowed the case, which she inherited from her Spanish
predecessor, Joaquin Almunia – who rejected three settlement proposals
from Google – the FT said.
Andreas
Schwab, a German conservative member of the European Parliament who has
pushed for the EU executive to consider even breaking up Google, told
Reuters earlier this week he expected the Commission to bring
competition charges against the company.
However,
industry and EU sources played down earlier on Tuesday suggestions that
Vestager was about to announce charges against the Google.
The
EU investigation is one of the highest profile competition cases of
recent years, rivalling probes into Microsoft Corp, and comes amid
political disquiet in Europe at the perceived dominance of U.S. tech
companies.
Almunia
launched the probe in 2010 and initially concluded that Google may have
hurt competitors by favouring its own products and services in search
results and blocking advertisers from moving their campaigns to rival
platforms.
Since
then, Google has offered three proposals to resolve the case. Most
recently, just over a year ago, it offered to give competing products
and services bigger visibility on its website, let content providers
decide what material it can use for its own services and make it easier
for advertisers to move their campaigns to rivals.
Almunia
initially accepted that deal, only to reverse his decision six months
later and demand more concessions, leaving the ultimate decision to his
successor.
Microsoft has been hit with total EU fines of more than 2.2 billion euros ($2.34 billion) over the past decade.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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