The Texas Attorney General has filed a lawsuit against Google, charging that while the company has submitted some documents in response to an antitrust investigation, it is holding back on many others. Google says the company is cooperating.
Dissatisfied
with the pace of its almost 2-year-old antitrust probe into Google's search
results rankings, the state of Texas has filed a lawsuit against the search
company to get it to comply with previous document requests.
In a
lawsuit filed in Austin this week, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
"demanded that the Internet company
cooperate
with its probe and hand over intentionally withheld documents,"
according to a report by the Reuters
news service. "The state's attorney general said Google was holding out
despite having handed over hundreds of thousands of documents since August
2010."
"The
attorney general's office 'suspects that there are many documents being
improperly withheld based on assertions of privilege,'" Reuters reported. "Google has
significantly over-reached in its effort to prevent disclosure of
documents."
In a
statement emailed today to
eWEEK, a Google spokesman said the company is
cooperating with the probe. "We have shared hundreds of thousands of
documents with the Texas Attorney General, and we are happy to answer any
questions that regulators have about our business," the spokesman said in
the prepared statement.
The start
of the probe was reported by
eWEEK back in September 2010, when Abbott
began looking into complaints that the company
stifled
Websites that competed with its search engine.
Google
Deputy General Counsel Don Harrison
confirmed
the investigation at that time in a blog post. "The cases cover those
brought by shopping comparison Websites Foundem and myTriggers, and search directory
SourceTools, all three of whom have ties to Microsoft,"
eWEEK reported.
"Rankings, or where Websites are placed in Google's search results pages,
can make or break companies that live online because Google commands roughly 65
percent of the search market."
The
Federal Trade Commission, meanwhile, is
also
conducting its own antitrust investigation of Google. "The FTC is
investigating whether Google abused its dominant position in the search engine
spaceit currently holds about 66 percent of the market, followed by
Microsofts Bingto unfairly promote its own products over those of its rivals
in search results. Google has come under similar scrutiny from regulators in
Europe, where the European Commission has been conducting its own investigation
and reportedly will make a decision within the next few weeks whether to pursue
legal action."
The
commission opened its investigation of Google last year.
Google, as
its influence in the tech space has grown, has come under increasingly intense
scrutiny from regulators, rivals and civil liberties advocates over issues of
everything from business practices to privacy. The most recent worries center
on the companys Search, plus your world social-search feature, which pulls
in posts and pictures from users Google+ accounts into search results, and
makes Google+ contacts and relevant Google+ pages more readily searchable.
The FTC in
January decided to
bring
the new social-search feature into the antitrust investigation, saying the
concern was that it was another way Google could inject bias into search
results.
Also in
January, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
filed
a related complaint with the FTC, asking the agency to look into changes
that Google made to its search algorithm. EPIC's complaint alleged that Google's
"Search, plus your world" service infringes on user privacy and
antitrust regulations.
"EPIC
cited Google's decision to include personal data, such as photos, posts and
contact details, gathered from Google+ in Google Search results," EPIC
reported on its Website in January. Googles business practices raise concerns
related to both competition and the implementation of the Commissions consent
order, EPIC said, referring to a
settlement
that the FTC reached with Google that establishes new privacy safeguards for
users of Google products and services and subjects the company to regular
privacy audits.