Google's search tweaks draw fire as EU self-preferencing ban looms

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Changes to how Google displays search results in the European Union, which the tech giant is testing ahead of a ban on self-preferencing that kicks in March 7 under the ex ante competition reform, the Digital Markets Act (DMA), have drawn a furious reaction from online travel agency, eDreams Odigeo.

Google's tweaks to what it displays in response to travel-related search queries "continues to raise substantial competitive concerns within the travel retailing industry, particularly by perpetuating long-standing self-favouring practices that actively encourage consumers to remain within Google’s ecosystem", the online travel agency said today in a press release that also urges "vigilance" and "decisive action" from EU regulators whose job it will soon be to enforce the DMA on so called "gatekeepers".

Google is one of six designated DMA gatekeepers. The other five being: Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta and Microsoft. All are expected to operate their online empires in line with the regulation's list of up-front 'dos and don'ts' -- with formal compliance kicking in in a little over a month's time. Failure to abide by the law could lead to fines of up to 10% of their annual turnover if the European Commission finds fault. So the stakes are high -- even for these tech giants -- with the potential for fines that could run into the billions.

Last week a coalition of travel industry firms that eDreams is also part of, which calls itself eu travel tech -- and also includes the likes of AirBnb, Booking.com and Expedia -- expressed concerns about Google's direction of travel on DMA compliance; saying that after months of talks between the search giant and industry stakeholders, which the latter had hoped would ensure the bloc's ex ante competition rules have an impact from day one, Google's early proposals have been (and we paraphrase) 'weak sauce'. (The lobby group's actual statement, attributed to secretary general Emmanuel Mounier, is the slightly more polite assertion there's "still quite some work to do".)

Also last week, a broader grouping of EU-based tech companies, looping in comparison sites, general search competitors, secure productivity tools makers, online news publishers and others -- joining forces to press for DMA action under a banner they've branded the EU Tech Alliance -- warned of what they described as a "lack of effective engagement" by gatekeepers to calls to submit draft compliance solutions well in advance of the March 2024 deadline, to ensure a proper consultation involving business users, consumers and others.