SANTA MONICA, CA – Consumer Watchdog has challenged Google to make public its latest proposal to settle the European Commission’s antitrust investigation by 5 p.m. Wednesday, or the public interest group said it would release the proposed deal itself.
“I am writing on behalf of Consumer Watchdog to challenge you to hold your company to the same standards of behavior as you unilaterally impose on everyone else,” wrote John M. Simpson Privacy Project Director in a letter to Google CEO Larry Page. “Google claims its ‘mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.’ You do an
amazing job of this — including making public much of what people would prefer be kept private — except when the information is about Google.”
The most recent example of this hypocritical approach to privacy is Google’s proposed settlement to end the European Commission’s antitrust investigation of the Internet giant, Consumer Watchdog said. Last April, a settlement proposal was offered, published publicly and market tested. It was found deficient. Since then Google has made a new offer that supposedly remedies the failures in the first. However, the public cannot judge whether that is the case because neither the Commission nor Google has released the latest document to the public.
Consumer Watchdog commented on the original proposal and therefore received a copy of the latest offer and was asked its opinion of the proposal.
“We will provide detailed comments soon. For now, it’s clear the settlement offer does nothing to fix the underlying problem of how Google manipulates search results to unfairly advantage its own services, like Google Shopping or Google Maps, over competitors,” wrote Simpson.
Read Consumer Watchdog’s letter here: http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/ltrpage110513.pdf
“We have been asked not to share the documents outside our organization,” wrote Simpson. “However, Consumer Watchdog is convinced that for the public interest to be served, the proposal must be open for full scrutiny by all.”
The letter continued:
“It is not just competitors that are impacted by your unfair monopolistic business practices; consumers are directly affected as
well when they are forced to
pay higher prices as a result of manipulated search results. Google’s broad impact on all Internet users is precisely what prompted us to speak out about the inadequate settlement that was originally proposed.
“Reaching an antitrust settlement largely under the cloak of confidentiality undercuts the public’s trust
in the entire process. That serves neither the interests of Google nor the Commission. If justice is to be done, it must be seen to be done.
“Google’s proposed settlement must be scrutinized, compared with the previous proposal and discussed by those impacted, both competitors and consumers.
“Just this once, Mr. Page, treat your company’s data the same way you treat everyone else’s: Organize the information and “make it universally accessible and useful.” In other words, release your latest European antitrust settlement offer by 5 p.m. today, or Consumer Watchdog will.”
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Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 3:18 pm