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Google snubs EU telcos network cost sharing demand as old idea, bad for consumers

US BigTech Google while rebuffing the push said it was a 10-year-old idea that was bad for consumers and that the company was already investing millions in internet infrastructure.

Google (Photo : File)

Days after the top EU telecom majors including , , Telefonica urged the EU regulatory body to push US BigTech to share network costs, US BigTech while rebuffing the push said it was a 10-year-old idea that was bad for consumers and that the company was already investing millions in internet infrastructure.

Already under pressure due to rising energy prices across Europe due to ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and with the onset of winters, the European Commission is busy seeking feedback from both sides before making a legislative proposal that could force tech companies to help pay for the roll-out of 5G and fibre cables across the 27-country European Union. So far 13 EU telecom majors have urged the EU regulatory body to push US BigTech to share network costs.

Meanwhile, Matt Brittin, president of EMEA business & operations at Google, European Commission said it would seek feedback from the telecoms and tech industries on the issue in the coming months before making any legislative proposal.

The idea, floated more than 10 years ago, could disrupt Europe's net neutrality or open internet access, Brittin said. “Introducing a ‘sender pays' principle is not a new idea, and would upend many of the principles of the open internet,” he said according to the text of a speech to be delivered at a conference organised by telecoms lobbying group ETNO.

“These arguments are similar to those we heard 10 or more years ago and we have not seen new data that changes the situation.” It “could have a negative impact on consumers, especially at a time of price increases,” Brittin said, citing a report by pan-European consumer group BEUC outlining such concerns.

He said Google, owner of YouTube, has done its part to make it more efficient for telecoms providers by carrying traffic 99% of the way and investing millions of euros to do so.

“In 2021, we invested over 23 billion euros in capital expenditure – much of which is infrastructure,” Brittin said. These include six large data centres in Europe, 20 subsea cables globally, with five in Europe, and caches to store digital content within local networks in 20 locations in Europe.

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