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EU trade chief stalls Google fine after Trump threats
EU trade chief stalls Google fine after Trump threats
by AFP Staff Writers
Brussels, Belgium (AFP) Sept 3, 2025

The EU's trade chief insisted Wednesday he fully backed the bloc's antitrust probe into Google after it emerged he hit pause on plans to fine the tech giant -- seemingly for fear of US retaliation.

An EU official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, told AFP that a political battle had broken out inside the bloc's executive after trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic this week delayed punishing the US behemoth.

"Sefcovic hit the red button" on the planned fine when it was put forward for approval on Monday, the official said.

The hold-up of the fine follows threats by Trump to go after Europe for regulations seeking to rein in US tech giants.

The wrangling also comes as the EU is waiting for the United States to make good on a promise to lower tariffs on cars under a trade deal agreed in July.

Sefcovic has been the EU's point man on the sensitive trade negotiations with US President Donald Trump's administration.

"I want to underline that I fully support the antitrust investigation against Google," Sefcovic told journalists.

The trade chief did not deny intervening to stop the fine, saying: "Our internal procedures exist for a reason, and using them is nothing out of ordinary."

"This is a complex case that requires a thorough assessment, and every step has been taken in collegial manner," he added.

"I can assure you that my priority is, and always will be, the European interest."

The EU has been probing Google since 2021 over suspicions it was abusing its dominating position in the advertising market.

Brussels recommended in 2023 the US company sell part of its ad services to ensure fair competition.

Google has meanwhile been facing a major antitrust case in the United States.

A US judge on Tuesday rejected the government's demand that Google sell its Chrome web browser, but imposed sweeping requirements to restore competition in online search.

The landmark ruling came after the judge found in August 2024 that Google illegally maintained monopolies in online search through exclusive distribution agreements worth billions of dollars annually.

Shares in Google parent company rose more than eight percent in trading on Wednesday.

Impact of US judge's ruling on Google's search dominance
Paris Sept 3, 2025 - Google has escaped a breakup of its Chrome browser in a major US competition case, but the judge imposed remedies whose impact remains uncertain just as AI starts to compete with search engines. Here is what we know about how the antitrust ruling could affect the company, the wider tech sector and ordinary users of the giant's services. - What is the impact on Google? Judge Amit Mehta, who found a year ago that Google illegally maintained monopolies in online search, did not order the company to sell off its widely-used Chrome browser in his Tuesday ruling. Neither did he halt Google's agreements with companies like iPhone maker Apple or Firefox browser developer Mozilla, under which it pays them to make Google their default search engine. Instead, he ordered remedies including requirements to share data with other firms so they could develop their own search products, and barring exclusive deals to make Google the only search engine on a device or service. The ruling was "far milder than feared... (it) removes a significant legal overhang and signals that the court is willing to pursue pragmatic remedies," Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Matt Britzman commented. Google chiefs nevertheless still "disagree... strongly with the Court's intial decision in August 2024," the company's Vice-President of Regulatory Affairs Lee-Anne Mulholland said in a blog post -- hinting at a likely appeal that could go all the way to the US Supreme Court. Stock in Google parent company Alphabet surged on Wednesday as investors welcomed the ruling. - How will this affect the wider tech sector? Mehta himself noted that the landscape has changed since the US Justice Department and 11 states launched their antitrust case against Google in 2020. The emergence of generative artificial intelligence as a challenge to traditional search "give(s) the court hope that Google will not simply outbid competitors for distribution if superior products emerge," he wrote in his ruling. "Competition is intense and people can easily choose the services they want," Google's Mulholland agreed. Others in the sector were unhappy with the ruling. "Google will still be allowed to continue to use its monopoly to hold back competitors, including in AI search," said Gabriel Weinberg, chief executive of privacy-conscious search engine DuckDuckGo. Beyond Google, observers have pointed out that Apple and Mozilla are both big winners from the decision. Ending tie-ups like theirs with Google would "impose substantial -- in some cases, crippling -- downstream harms to distribution partners, related markets and consumers," Mehta wrote. "This is a huge win for Apple, but perhaps even more so for Mozilla, which may very well have died" without the cash infusions, former Google Ventures investor M.G. Siegler wrote on his blog. - What about ordinary search and AI users? In the near term, some search data will be shared by Google with competitors under the ruling -- with Mulholland saying the company has "concerns about how these requirements will impact our users and their privacy". Looking further ahead, "Google Search is in the process of being disrupted" by chatbots, Siegler said. A future where the company's flagship search product is completely displaced may yet be far off, as Google Search notched up more than 85 billion individual visits in the month of March 2024, the most recent with data available from Statista. That compares with around 700 million weekly users reported by OpenAI for its ChatGPT chatbot, the biggest-name generative AI product. What's more, Google is not barred from entering into the same kinds of distribution deals as it struck for online search to place its own AI products on partner devices or services. The company already reports 450 million monthly users for its Gemini chatbot app, and offers competitive tools in other areas like video generation. Related Links
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