“The latest proposals submitted by Google are not acceptable in the sense that proposals that are not able to eliminate our concerns about competition,” Almunia said in an interview on National Radio of Spain, quoted by AFP .
For now, the European commissioner for the area of ??competition still does not consider the scenario of a fine. The Spanish politician admits that missing little time to get the case solved, but put pressure on the side of technology from Mountain View to say that the ball is still on your side.
If the process of anticompetitive practices against go to Google, the U.S. giant may prove to be fined five billion dollars, around EUR 3.66 billion.Google is being investigated by the European Commission since 2010 by alleged antitrust practices in the area of ??research. A major complaint lodged by rival is the fact that Google supposedly promote own services at the expense of services and tools from other companies.
In the case until October looked on course for resolution. At the time the commissioner had considered as positive the second wave of Google’s proposals made it easier to detect the rival products in the search engine results. Now after that European publishers turned to react publicly and requested “full of law.”application
Written under the new Orthographic Agreement
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