Google Search Could Change Forever within the UK | EUROtoday
“The decision to formally designate Google with Strategic Market Status is an important step to improving competition in digital markets,” argues Rocio Concha, director of coverage and advocacy at UK client watchdog Which?. “Online search is evolving as gen AI tools become more widely used, but the CMA must still act to tackle the harmful dominance Google has now and to promote competition between gen AI search tools.”
The CMA claims that Google Search accounts for greater than 90 p.c of all common search queries within the UK, and that over 200,000 corporations within the UK collectively spent greater than £10 billion ($13.3 billion) on Google search promoting in 2024.
“Designating Google with SMS enables us to consider proportionate, targeted interventions to ensure that general search services are open to effective competition, and that consumers and businesses that rely on Google can have confidence that they are treated fairly,” the CMA choice report reads.
In a press release shared with WIRED in response to the CMA’s choice, Google’s senior director of competitors Oliver Bethell mentioned that most of the concepts for interventions raised on this course of would “inhibit UK innovation and growth, potentially slowing product launches at a time of profound AI-based innovation.” It continued: “Others pose direct harm to businesses, with some warning that they may be forced to raise prices for customers.”
This shouldn’t be a stunning response, says Greg Dowell, senior competitors information lawyer at regulation agency Macfarlanes. “I think we can expect Google and all the other big tech firms that are being subjected to these new rules to try and defend their practices on the basis that they are pro-consumer,” says Dowell. “Ultimately it is natural that Google and other firms in this position don’t want to be constrained in what they can do when it comes to new product development.”
The new regulation will even have an effect on Google Search’s “News” tab and its “Top Stories” carousel, in addition to Google Discover. Google News, the corporate’s stand-alone information product, and AI chatbot Gemini should not affected, the CMA says.
Dowell claims that implementing this roadmap may take a lot of months. “The CMA may go further than the EU has done with the [Digital Markets Act]particularly with regards to restrictions relating to Google’s AI services and how they’re integrated into Google search,” he explains.
“The CMA essentially has a huge degree of flexibility in the interventions that it can seek to impose, and so it can continually react to developments as they occur. So that’s one benefit of the UK digital markets regulation regime, particularly when you compare it to the situation in the EU, where these sorts of rules are fixed in the regulation itself.”
https://www.wired.com/story/uk-watchdog-targets-google-search-in-competition-crackdown/