Europe's top court upholds Google's record $4.7B antitrust fine

(neowin.net)

15 points | by bundie 14 hours ago ago

8 comments

  • johnathan101 14 hours ago ago

    Cases like this always make me wonder how much of the penalty actually changes behavior versus just becoming another cost of doing business.

    • chromadon 11 hours ago ago

      I often wonder what would happen if Google just refused to pay, or just kept it stuck in legal purgatory as that would be cheaper than paying the fine.

    • luckystarr 13 hours ago ago

      It only changes behaviour if the risk of having to pay outweighs the benefit. And Google won't tell what they earned through that I guess.

    • paulddraper 7 hours ago ago

      They definitely affect behavior.

      Legal compliance is a huge part of modern enterprises precisely because of cases like this. Ultimately, everything has a risk/reward analysis, but it factors in heavily.

  • xg15 13 hours ago ago

    How much do all the appeals processes cost?

  • ChrisArchitect 14 hours ago ago
  • paulddraper 11 hours ago ago

    tl;dr Google required Android phone manufactures to use Google Search and Chrome.

    Ironically, Apple uses Safari on 100% of their phones.

  • jimmy76615 12 hours ago ago

    I'm sure Trump is going to retaliate with tariffs. The times when the EU could steal from American companies that easily are over.