By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS, Feb 25 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s Google is poised to start testing changes to its search results to give rivals more โprominence, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday, โseeking to avoid an EU fine for allegedly favouring its own services in searches for hotels, flights โand restaurants.
The world’s most popular internet search engine has come up with various proposals to mollify rivals and EU regulators since it was charged last March with breaching the Digital Markets Act. The company has yet to implement any of those proposals after โrivals complained that the measures โ were insufficient.
The issue pits Google against vertical search services (VSS) linked to sectors such as hotels, airlines and restaurants or to companies โ in those sectors.
TOP-RANKED RIVALS TO BE DISPLAYED BY DEFAULT, SOURCE SAYS
The previously unreported changes to its search results will show both VSS and Google results, with top-ranked vertical โsearch engines โdisplayed by default, the source said.
Hotels, airlines, โrestaurants and transport services with real-time โdata from feeds will sit either below or above the list of vertical search engines.
The changes will soon be rolled out across Europe, initially focusing on searches for lodgings but later adding flights and other services, the source said without providing further details.
The European Commission declined to comment.
The changes could help to appease the โEuropean Commission, which acts as EU competition enforcer. โFines for Digital Markets Act breaches can be โup to 10% of a โcompany’s global annual revenue.
Google has racked up 9.71 billion euros ($11.5 billion) โin fines since 2017 for various โantitrust infringements in Europe.
The โEU crackdown on Big Tech for squeezing out rivals has sharpened tensions with the United States, prompting tariff threats and a visa ban against a โformer European Commission official โwho spearheaded landmark digital services legislation requiring online platforms to do more โto fight illegal and harmful content.
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(Reporting by Foo Yun โCheeEditing by Adam Jourdan and David Goodman)