TLDRs; • The EU has opened a sweeping antitrust probe into Google’s AI tools and publisher compensation practices. • Regulators aim to determine whether Google’s AI Overviews use publisher content without fair licensing or payment. • Past Google investigations took years and resulted in multibillion-euro fines, shaping expectations for this new case. • Rights-tech startups [...] The post Google (GOOGL) Stock: Faces Fresh EU Scrutiny as Regulators Question AI Use appeared first on CoinCentral.TLDRs; • The EU has opened a sweeping antitrust probe into Google’s AI tools and publisher compensation practices. • Regulators aim to determine whether Google’s AI Overviews use publisher content without fair licensing or payment. • Past Google investigations took years and resulted in multibillion-euro fines, shaping expectations for this new case. • Rights-tech startups [...] The post Google (GOOGL) Stock: Faces Fresh EU Scrutiny as Regulators Question AI Use appeared first on CoinCentral.

Google (GOOGL) Stock: Faces Fresh EU Scrutiny as Regulators Question AI Use

TLDRs;

• The EU has opened a sweeping antitrust probe into Google’s AI tools and publisher compensation practices.

• Regulators aim to determine whether Google’s AI Overviews use publisher content without fair licensing or payment.

• Past Google investigations took years and resulted in multibillion-euro fines, shaping expectations for this new case.

• Rights-tech startups may benefit as Europe pushes for structured AI-era licensing and stronger protections for press publishers

The European Union has opened a major antitrust investigation into Google, marking one of the bloc’s most consequential inquiries into artificial intelligence to date. Regulators are examining whether Google’s rapidly expanding AI features depend heavily on online publishers’ content, and whether the company is compensating rights holders fairly.

Following the announcement, Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) shares dipped 0.19%, reflecting investor caution over potential regulatory fallout.


GOOG Stock Card
Alphabet Inc., GOOG

The probe, announced this week, will assess how Google deploys AI tools such as AI Overviews and AI Mode, both of which summarize information scraped from across the web. EU officials want to determine if these tools give Google an unfair advantage in search and online content markets by leaning on publishers’ material without appropriate licensing.

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, now faces another high-stakes battle with European regulators, adding to a long history of scrutiny across its search, ad, and mobile businesses.

Google’s AI Tools Under the Microscope

At the center of the inquiry is the question of how Google builds and presents AI-generated answers. With AI Overviews now appearing across billions of search queries, publishers fear a future in which their content is used to power Google’s AI while their websites receive fewer direct visits.

Regulators are investigating whether such systems effectively “lift” information without fair compensation, undermining competition and weakening revenue streams for media outlets.

The EU is also studying contract terms offered to publishers, including whether Google imposes unfair licensing conditions or pressures smaller publishers into agreements with limited transparency.

Historic Fines Set the Stage for a Lengthy Battle

This is not the first time Google has faced a sprawling EU inquiry. Past antitrust cases, ranging from Shopping (2010–2017) to Android (2015–2018) to AdSense (2013–2019), spanned three to seven years and collectively resulted in over €8 billion in fines.

While these penalties were significant, regulators stopped short of requiring structural breakups. Instead, Google implemented solutions such as app unbundling and choice screens.More recently, the EU pursued a faster timeline in its ad tech case, issuing a €2.95 billion fine and giving Google 60 days to propose remedies.

Still, appeals have historically slowed final enforcement, and experts expect this new AI-focused case to follow a similarly prolonged trajectory. A formal Statement of Objections could arrive within one to three years, with final rulings years after that.

Publishers and Rights Groups See an Opening

European publishers, especially in France, Denmark, and the Netherlands, have become increasingly vocal about AI-era licensing and copyright enforcement. Under Article 15 of the EU Copyright Directive, press publishers hold exclusive rights over the reproduction and online availability of their content. Authors are also legally entitled to receive a share of revenue from licensing deals.

Collective Management Organizations (CMOs), long established in the music industry, are now being positioned to handle large-scale licensing for journalism and online content. These CMOs already operate in Denmark and the Netherlands, offering a proven structure for distributing royalties to thousands of rights holders.

The post Google (GOOGL) Stock: Faces Fresh EU Scrutiny as Regulators Question AI Use appeared first on CoinCentral.

Market Opportunity
null Logo
null Price(null)
--
----
USD
null (null) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

FalconX Launches First Ethereum Staking Rate Forwards (FRAs) Referencing Treehouse’s TESR

FalconX Launches First Ethereum Staking Rate Forwards (FRAs) Referencing Treehouse’s TESR

The post FalconX Launches First Ethereum Staking Rate Forwards (FRAs) Referencing Treehouse’s TESR appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Singapore, Singapore, September 25th, 2025, FinanceWire Institutional participants include Edge Capital, Monarq, Mirana, and more, as FalconX facilitates the first Forward transactions based on the Treehouse Ethereum Staking Rate (TESR) FalconX, the leading institutional digital asset prime broker, today announced the launch of the first Forward Rate Agreement trade referencing Treehouse Ethereum staking yields. The contracts are benchmarked to the Treehouse Ethereum Staking Rate (TESR) and mark a significant milestone in bringing rate-based financial instruments to digital assets. Executed by FalconX, one of the world’s leading providers of digital asset derivatives, TESR Forwards enable market participants to hedge, speculate, or gain structured exposure to Ethereum staking yields by referencing TESR—a decentralized, consensus-driven benchmark built specifically for the digital asset markets. This launch introduces a scalable rate derivatives market that is similar to traditional financial instruments like interest rate swaps and forwards. “FalconX is proud to launch TESR FRAs, which give institutions access to sophisticated tools for managing staking rate exposure,” said Ivan Lim, Senior Derivatives Trader at FalconX. “This marks an important step forward in integrating institutional-grade risk management in crypto markets.” TESR is published by Treehouse, a digital asset infrastructure firm building the decentralized fixed income layer for crypto markets. One of the benchmarks under Treehouse’s Decentralized Offered Rates (DOR) framework, TESR provides a transparent, consensus-based reference rate for Ethereum staking. Updated daily using data and expert panel inputs, TESR reflects Ethereum’s staking yield curve and serves as a foundational benchmark for structured products and interest rate derivatives across DeFi and the broader digital asset ecosystem. “The introduction of TESR FRAs signals a key milestone in building the fixed income layer for digital assets,” said Brandon Goh, CEO of Treehouse. “With TESR and the infrastructure we’ve built through DOR, we’re enabling institutions and staking providers to hedge, price, and manage…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/25 10:01
Kalshi Partners with Solana & Base to Launch KalshiEco Hub for Onchain Prediction Markets

Kalshi Partners with Solana & Base to Launch KalshiEco Hub for Onchain Prediction Markets

The first prediction markets exchange to be regulated by the CFTC, Kalshi, has launched the KalshiEco Hub in partnership with Solana and Coinbase-backed Base. The new program aims to bring builders, traders, and content creators onto an expanding ecosystem of blockchain-based prediction markets. The launch of the KalshiEco Hub signals a step toward linking traditional […]
Share
Tronweekly2025/09/18 16:30
XLM Price Prediction: Stellar Targets $0.26-$0.27 Range by February 2026

XLM Price Prediction: Stellar Targets $0.26-$0.27 Range by February 2026

The post XLM Price Prediction: Stellar Targets $0.26-$0.27 Range by February 2026 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Zach Anderson Jan 14, 2026 13:31 XLM
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/01/15 10:06