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EU Parliament votes to break up Google

The European Parliament has passed a nonbinding vote to break up Google, The New York Times reports. The resolution, passed overnight, is merely symbolic and comes shortly after a separate European body sought to expand โ€œright to be forgottenโ€ privacy protections. A break up of Google in Europe will almost certainly not happen, legal experts […]
Kye White
Kye White
EU Parliament votes to break up Google

The European Parliament has passed a nonbinding vote to break up Google, The New York Times reports.

The resolution, passed overnight, is merely symbolic and comes shortly after a separate European body sought to expand โ€œright to be forgottenโ€ privacy protections.

A break up of Google in Europe will almost certainly not happen, legal experts say.

The tech giant is embroiled in a long-running antitrust case with the European Commission over the way it uses its search dominance, which accounts for more than 90% of the European market, to push its own services.

The resolution said โ€œthe online search market is of particular importance in ensuring competitive conditions within the digital single marketโ€ and welcomed the European Commissionโ€™s pledges to investigate the search engineโ€™s practices further.

It called on the commission โ€œto prevent any abuse in the marketing of interlinked services by operators of search enginesโ€, stressing the importance of non-discriminatory online search.

โ€œIndexation, evaluation, presentation and ranking by search engines must be unbiased and transparent,โ€ members of European Parliament (MEP) say.

Given the role search engines play in โ€œcommercialising secondary exploitation of obtained informationโ€ and the need to enforce EU competition rules, MEPs called on the Commission โ€œto consider proposals with the aim of unbundling search engines from other commercial servicesโ€.

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