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Home News Industry Amid EU turbulence, Swedish firm PriceRunner sues Google for $2.4 billion

Amid EU turbulence, Swedish firm PriceRunner sues Google for $2.4 billion

Google is already facing new tough IT regulations in Europe with growing scrutiny around company operations in the EU.

Google (Photo: Agency)

In another setback to the global technology giant, , a Swedish price comparison site has dragged the company seeking 2.1 billion euros ($2.4 billion) in compensation for promoting its own shopping comparisons in search results.

The US tech company is already facing new tough IT regulations in Europe with growing scrutiny around company operations in the EU. The EU is further moving towards bringing new legislation to tighten digital regulations. The US behemoths are currently facing fines and legal challenges in many European nations.

Meanwhile, the Swedish tech startup said it expected the “final damages amount of the lawsuit to be significantly higher,” given that “the violation is still ongoing.”

Chief executive Mikael Lindahl said the lawsuit was also a fight “for consumers who have suffered tremendously from Google's infringement of the competition law for the past fourteen years and still today.”

The Swedish tech startup filed its suit with the Patent and Market Court in Stockholm after the European Union General Court ruled that Google “breached EU antitrust laws by manipulating search results in favour of their own comparison shopping services.”

Earlier in November last year, the EU court upheld a 2.4-billion-euro fine the European Commission had slapped on Google in 2017, saying results from Google's own comparison service were “displayed in a more eye-catching manner.”

Google has meanwhile, defended itself and stressed that changes had been made after 2017 and that it “is subject to intensive monitoring by the European Commission and two external expert groups.”

“PriceRunner chose not to use ads on Google, so it may not have been as successful as others. We are ready to defend our position in court,” Frederic Abrard, director of CSS Shopping Ads at Google, said.

PriceRunner has maintained that it was seeking damages for profits it lost in Britain since 2008 as well as in Sweden and Denmark since 2013. PriceRunner said Google had a “monopoly-like position” within the European Economic Area (EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway), with over 90 per cent of the market share for internet search engines.

The price comparison site is based in Sweden but also operates in Denmark, Norway and the UK. It has previously said it plans to expand to more countries. In November, Swedish fintech Klarna bought PriceRunner for an undisclosed sum, with media reports putting the price at over $1 billion.

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