Washington: The European Union said Thursday it filed formal charges in an anti-trust case against Google to speedily resolve allegations that the tech titan abuses its search engine’s market dominance.
EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said Google was a “very successful” company, but that preferential use of its own shopping product in its search engine could be harmful to consumers and competitors.
Vestager announced the charges Wednesday, five years after the case was initially launched.
“What I saw when I took office was that discussions about commitments didn’t seem to move forward, neither very fast nor in promising way in order to finalise the case,” she told reporters in Washington.
“It was important for me to get a firsthand impression both of the complainants and of the Google company about themselves and to update the file,” she added.
She said the case was an issue of urgency when she took the post as Europe’s top competition watchdog in November. “It was my option that we should move forward here instead of waiting,” she said.
Vestager announced the sensitive probe Wednesday ahead of a high-profile visit to the US capital and New York this week.