Skip to main content

FTC investigation into Google getting more focused

Google-FTC-antitrust-probe
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Federal Trade Commission has increased its scrutiny of Google, delving into specific aspects of the company’s business — namely Android and search services — as part of an ongoing antitrust investigation.

The FTC’s lawyers want to know whether or not Google has strong-armed Android-based smartphone manufacturers into exclusively using its products. Additionally, regulators are investigating if Google is biased in its placement of Google services within Google search results. Finally, the FTC is following up on claims that Google swipes info curated by its competitors (restaurant reviews, map data, etc.) to use in its own services, while still bumping competitors down in search results.

The FTC first served Google with a whole gaggle of subpoenas in June. Google initially claimed that the subpoenas carved such a broad swath in the company’s business that it didn’t ever really know what the FTC was looking for. But Android aside, it’s become readily apparent that the FTC is aiming its investigatory guns right at Google’s heart: its search business.

In one instance given by the Wall Street Journal, the FTC has discussed Google’s review aggregation with Yelp and TripAdvisor. Google’s Places service, which offers business listings and customer reviews, includes reviews from the aforementioned sites and others. Google claims it was aggregating searchable content, while those sites allege what Google did was theft. In a possible preemptive move, Google recently removed the clips of aggregated reviews it had previously used in Places.

The FTC is only in its earliest stages as investigators have to learn the business first before they can start questioning further and making judgements. However, with the European Commission also investigating Google, not to mention the ongoing Android patent war, Google looks to be embroiled in legal issues for the foreseeable future.

Topics
Derek Mead
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Google adds icons to image searches to offer more info on thumbnails
Google's Logo

Google is constantly tweaking the appearance and functionality of its popular search engine, with the latest change aimed at image searches.

Rolling out by the end of the week, the new feature means that when looking for images using Google on desktop, you’ll see small icons at the bottom left corner of each listed thumbnail that offer more information about the page to which they are linked.

Read more
Google deploys its SOS Alerts system for reliable coronavirus information
Google's Logo

With cases of the coronavirus continuing to appear in more countries around the world, Google has added official safety advice and other relevant information to the top of its search results for people keen to find out more about the outbreak.

Google announced the move on Thursday, January 30, after the World Health Organization (WHO) officially declared the coronavirus outbreak an international public health emergency.

Read more
Google’s antitrust woes continue as state officials meet with Justice Department
google pop up stores 2018 hardware 35

 

The antitrust investigation into Google may be about to kick up a notch. In the United States, both the Department of Justice (DOJ) and state attorneys general are probing whether the search giant acted in an anticompetitive manner in two separate investigations. But the two could be about to start sharing information on their respective probes, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.

Read more