BRUSSELS â Not long ago, Microsoft was the scourge of European antitrust regulators.
It was fined not once, not twice, not thrice but four times. Finally, after Microsoft paid more than $ 3 billion, Europe left it alone.
Now, Google is firmly in Europeâs cross hairs: Antitrust regulators on Wednesday formally accused the company of abusing its dominance. And Microsoft is relishing a second act in Brussels, playing the role of scold instead of victim.
Microsoft has kept its coffers full for the fight, spending more on lobbying here than any European company. And Microsoft has founded or funded a cottage industry of splinter groups. The most prominent, the Initiative for a Competitive Online Marketplace, or Icomp, has waged a relentless public relations campaign promoting grievances against Google. Icomp hosts webinars, panel discussions and news conferences. It conducted a study that suggested changes made by Google to appease regulators were largely window dressing.
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Microsoft has links, to varying degrees, with the three initial complainants that sparked the antitrust investigation into Google. And Microsoftâs activity gained momentum as a new European government re-energized the investigation. Last month, Microsoft played an important role in a delegation of American companies that met with the United States ambassador here, essentially asking him to let Google fend for itself against European regulators.
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Bill Gates of Microsoft, left, testifying in 1998 before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on anticompetitive issues. Credit Associated Press
The two companies are the Cain and Abel of American technology, locked in the kind of struggle that often takes place when a new giant threatens an older one. Microsoft was frustrated after American regulators at the Federal Trade Commission didnât act on a similar antitrust investigation against Google in 2013, calling it a âmissed opportunity.â It has taken the fight to the state level, along with a number of other opponents of Google.
The main battle is now in Europe, where the two companies are fighting what could be called an away game, thousands of miles from their American headquarters. Policy makers are alarmed that Googleâs European market share is roughly 90 percent in many countries, even greater than it is in America.
âMicrosoft is doing its best to create problems for Google,â said Manfred Weber, the chairman of the European Peopleâs Party, the center-right party that is the largest voting bloc in the European Parliament.
âItâs interesting. Ten years ago Microsoft was a big and strong company,â he added. âNow they are the underdog.â
None of this is to suggest that Google doesnât face serious questions about its business practices. Margrethe Vestager, the European competition commissioner, said in a news conference on Wednesday that âin its general interest search results, Google artificially favors its own comparison shopping serviceâ to the detriment of rivals. âThis constitutes an abuse.â
She said the commission was continuing to investigate whether Google improperly copied other companiesâ content and used exclusivity deals to prevent businesses from using rival advertising platforms. She also formally opened an inquiry in a potent new battleground: how Google deals with competition in its Android operating system for mobile phones.
And Microsoft is hardly alone in this fight, with other American technology and Internet companies lining up against Google in Europe, including Yelp, which ranks restaurants and other businesses, and TripAdvisor, a travel site. Influential European powers have also weighed in, including German publishers, who have been aggrieved by Googleâs tactics and its use of their content.
âThe reality in Brussels is that youâre either in the Google camp or the opposite camp, and that goes for companies or advisers or trade associations,â said Thomas Tindemans, the chief executive of the Brussels branch of Hill & Knowlton, the public relations firm. âThis is a phenomenon weâve seen in the past, when the commission was going after Microsoft.â
David Howard, Microsoftâs deputy general counsel, said, âWe have been clear all along about our concerns about Googleâs business practices and their effects on fair competition.
âWe are one of more than 30 complainants, among many others, who have shared similar concerns with regulators hoping that competition will be restored for the benefit of consumers and businesses,â he said.
Google has undertaken its own prodigious lobbying effort; its chairman, Eric E. Schmidt, has made appeals to top regulators. And it has disputed that it manipulates its search results or treats competitors unfairly.
In a statement, Peter Barron, a Google vice president based in Europe, said: âWe face strong competition from many different sources. Amazon is the leader in online shopping; Booking, Expedia and Priceline are the big players in travel.
âPeople have lots of choice online, and that has only increased in recent years â the tremendous growth of mobile devices underlines the dynamism and constant innovation we see in the online economy.â
The European inquiry started in 2010 after three obscure businesses â one French, one British, one German â filed claims against Google.
Ciao, a German comparison shopping site, claimed that its agreement to use Googleâs search services restricted its ability to do advertising deals with Googleâs rivals. The site was bought by Microsoft before the company filed its complaint.
Foundem, a British online marketplace, has argued that Googleâs search engine favors its own shopping services and demotes search results linked to Foundem and other competitors. Foundem was co-founded by Shivaun Raff, who went to work as an adviser to Icomp in 2011. Ms. Raff has traveled the world attacking Googleâs practices, meeting with regulators and policy makers in countries that include India, the United States and
Technology – Google News
Microsoft, Once an Antitrust Target, Is Now Google's Regulatory Scold - New York Times
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