London: A top European Union court on Wednesday rejected Google's appeal of a 2.4 billion euro ($2.8 billion) fine from regulators who found the tech giant abused its massive online reach by giving its own shopping recommendations an unfair advantage in search results.
The European Commission, the 27-nation bloc's top competition watchdog, punished Google in 2017 for unfairly directing visitors to its own shopping service, Google Shopping, to the detriment of competitors. The EU's General Court dismissed Google's appeal of that antitrust penalty and upheld the fine.
"The General Court thus rules that, in reality, Google favours its own comparison shopping service over competing services, rather than a better result over another result," it said in a press release.
Google said it made changes in 2017 to comply with the European Commission's decision.
"Our approach has worked successfully for more than three years, generating billions of clicks for more than 700 comparison shopping services," a Google statement said.
Also read:Google appeals $591M French fine in copyright payment spat
The fine was part of an effort by European regulators to curb the online giant's clout on the continent. It was followed by two other blockbuster antitrust penalties against Google, totalling 8.25 billion euros ($9.5 billion), which the company also is appealing. The fines are a drop in the bucket for Google's parent company, Alphabet Inc., which earned $182 billion in revenue last year.
The penalties were early salvos in the EU's crackdown on tech companies, which has expanded to include other Silicon Valley digital giants. The commission this year launched fresh antitrust investigations into whether Google and Facebook are stifling competition in digital and classified advertising markets. It's also investigating Apple over payments and Amazon over concerns it's unfairly competing against independent merchants on its platform with its own products.