Europe’s competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, has come under pressure from the European Parliament to hasten a decision on the longstanding Google case. Credit Olivier Hoslet/European Pressphoto Agency
LONDON â The European Commission is said to be planning to charge Google with using its dominant position in online search to favor the companyâs own online services over others, in what would be one of the biggest antitrust cases here since antitrust regulators went after Microsoft.
Europeâs competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, is expected to make an announcement that Google has abused its dominant position on Wednesday in Brussels, according to two people who spoke on Tuesday on the condition of anonymity.
The decision to push ahead with a so-called statement of objections is the latest twist in the lengthy investigation in Googleâs activities in Europe, where it holds a roughly 90 percent share in the regionâs search market. If Europe is successful in making its case, the American tech giant could face a huge fine and may be be forced to alter its business practices to give smaller competitors like Yelp greater prominence in its search queries.
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A representative for Google declined to comment.
The biggest American tech companies face intensifying scrutiny by European regulators, with â pressure that could potentially curb their sizable profits in the region and affect how they operate around the world.
The investigation against Google already has dragged on for nearly five years at the European Commission without formal charges or a negotiated settlement. That delay has prompted criticism that the regionâs most important antitrust enforcer has been going too easy on Google.
Europeâs main focus of investigation is whether Google has abused its search engineâs large market share by favoring its own products. The search engine is more dominant in Europe than in the United States, where competitors like Microsoftâs Bing still hold a sizable market share. Ms. Vestager, a Danish politician who took over as Europeâs top antitrust official in November, will travel to Washington later this week, where she is expected to meet senior justice officials and participate in antitrust conferences.
More than two dozen companies and organizations have filed antitrust complaints in Europe against Google. Many are in Germany, where powerful publishing groups and online firms have called on the European regulator to stop the American search giant from blocking competition in sectors like online mapping, travel services and shopping.
âThe E.U. competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, will decide what steps they want to go,â Günther Oettinger, a German politician who is charge of Europeâs digital economy, told Die Welt am Sonntag, a German newspaper, on Sunday. âI think that they will be far-reaching.â
If Google fails to rebut any formal charges, Ms. Vestager could levy a huge fine that could go above 6 billion euros, or $ 6.4 billion, amounting to about 10 percent of Googleâs most recent annual revenue. But the largest single fine yet levied in such a case falls well short of that mark: The record penalty is â¬1.1 billion in 2009 against Intel for abusing its dominance of the computer chip market.
The commission previously spent years reining in Microsoft, which accrued a total of almost â¬2 billion in European fines over a decade, including a penalty in 2013 for failing to adhere to an earlier settlement.
Google still could settle the matter. But whatever the search giant might negotiate with the commission, analysts say the deal will have a greater impact on its business than previous attempts to settle. Ms. Vestagerâs predecessor, JoaquÃn Almunia, gave Google three opportunities to make concessions that were aimed at allowing the company to escape both a fine and a formal finding of wrongdoing.
Those settlement efforts repeatedly ran afoul of Googleâs rivals, including American companies like Microsoft and Yelp, which successfully complained that most of the changes proposed by Google have been insufficient to solve the antitrust concerns identified by regulators.
âEveryone should have equal treatment,â said Thomas Vinje, a lawyer for FairSearch Europe, which represents rivals to Google. âGoogle should apply its own algorithm fairly to everything, including its own services.â
Ms. Vestager has come under pressure from the European Parliament to hasten a decision after lawmakers passed a nonbinding resolution last year calling on her to consider breaking up Google.
The antitrust case is among several regulatory headaches that the search engine faces in Europe. Local policy makers have also criticized the company for its tax practices and how it manages peopleâs online privacy.
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Google Expected to Face Antitrust Charges in Europe - New York Times

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