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This is an archive article published on June 24, 2015

Getty Images takes Google grievance to EU antitrust regulators

Getty Images, the renowned photojournalism archive said its troubles with Google started in early 2013.

Getty Images, Google vs Getty Images, Google Image Search, Getty Images vs google Images, Google anti-trust case, EU, European Union, Google domination, Google EU anti-trust case, Google EU case, Google Inc., Technology, Technology news Getty Images has filed a complaint against Google Search engine. (Source: Associated Press)

Getty Images has become the latest company to take its grievances with Google to EU antitrust regulators as it accused the world’s most popular Internet search engine of favouring its own images service at the expense of rivals.

The complaint comes as the European Commission waits for Google to respond to charges of abusing its market power in a dozen EU countries since 2007 by distorting search results to favour its shopping service.

The renowned photojournalism archive said its troubles with Google started in early 2013.

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“Web search results that link directly to the Getty Images website are placed low in the search results, frequently, and remarkably, not on the first page of results,” the company said on its website. “This means Google is benefiting from the use of Getty Images content, used to generate results within Google Image Search, without sending the image searchers to the Getty Images website or other competing image search engines.”

Google spokesman Al Verney declined to comment.

Commission spokesman Ricardo Cardoso said Getty has been granted interested third party status, allowing the company to ask for a summary of antitrust charges against the Google.

The 19 critics, acknowledged as complainants by the EU enforcer, in contrast get a non-confidential, more detailed copy of the document.

CEPIC, a European association of picture industries and photo libraries, has also complained about Google diverting traffic from its members’ sites to its own services.

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Google can be fined up to 10 percent of its revenues, or as much as $6.6 billion, if found guilty of breaching EU antitrust rules.

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