Gate News message, April 16 — The European Commission issued preliminary findings to Alphabet on April 16, requiring Google to open its decades-accumulated core search data to competitors and AI chatbots to comply with the Digital Markets Act (DMA). The measure aims to limit the market dominance of the U.S. tech giant.
The proposed measures cover six domains: eligibility criteria for data recipients (explicitly including AI chatbots with search functionality), data scope Google must share, sharing methods and frequency, personal data anonymization procedures, FRAND pricing parameters, and access procedures for recipients. EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen stated: “Data is a critical input for online search and developing new services, including AI. Access to this data should not be restricted in ways that may harm competition.” The EU’s explicit inclusion of AI chatbots with search functionality means conversational AI systems that directly answer queries are legally recognized as operating in the same competitive space as traditional search engines, with equal data access rights. This implies that once finalized, products like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude will gain access to decades of Google Search user behavior data—a significant competitive advantage.
The regulatory process began on January 27, 2026, as part of the DMA’s enforcement deepening. Google was formally designated as providing core platform services on September 6, 2023, and began full DMA compliance on March 7, 2024. The Commission will issue a final binding decision by July 27, giving Google three months for final negotiations. Breaking data barriers could fundamentally disrupt the data-driven “Matthew Effect” in search markets, where more users generate richer data, improving quality and attracting more users. Forced data sharing may break this cycle, allowing AI startups to leverage Google’s data for model optimization without building user feedback from scratch.
Google responded swiftly, with senior competition counsel Clare Kelly stating the company will “firmly oppose this excessive intervention,” claiming it “far exceeds the DMA’s original mandate and endangers privacy and security.” If Google ultimately refuses compliance, the Commission can impose fines up to 10% of Alphabet’s annual global revenue—a potentially astronomical sum. The regulatory battle has just begun.
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