BRUSSELS – European Union (EU) antitrust regulators are investigating Google’s collection of data, the European Commission said Saturday, suggesting that the world’s most popular internet search engine remains in the union’s sights despite record fines in recent years.
Competition enforcers on both sides of the Atlantic are now looking into how dominant tech companies use and monetize data.
“The Commission has sent out questionnaires as part of a preliminary investigation into Google’s practices relating to Google’s collection and use of data. The preliminary investigation is ongoing,” the EU regulator said in an email.
A document seen by Reuters shows the EU’s focus is on data related to local search services, online advertising, online ad targeting services, login services, web browsers and others.
European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager has handed down fines totaling more than eight billion euros to Google in the last two years and ordered it to change its business practices.
Google has said it uses data to better its services and that users can manage, delete and transfer their data at any time. (Reuters)