Google ended its antitrust complaint against Microsoft on Friday. The decision comes after European Union regulators opened their own investigation into cloud computing practices.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
Last year, Google filed a complaint with the European Commission. The company accused Microsoft of using unfair tactics to lock customers into its Azure cloud platform.
The timing matters here. EU regulators launched their cloud sector probe just one week ago. Google decided to let them handle it instead.
Giorgia Abeltino serves as senior director for Google Cloud Europe. She announced the withdrawal in a Friday blog post.
The cloud computing market shows a clear hierarchy. Amazon dominates with 30% market share. Microsoft holds second place at 20%. Google sits in third with 13%.
Google isn’t giving up on its concerns. The company simply believes EU regulators will tackle the same problems through their formal investigation.
The European Commission serves as the EU’s competition enforcer. Regulators are examining whether cloud sector practices give Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services unfair advantages.
The investigation timeline runs one year. Both companies could end up designated as gatekeepers under the Digital Markets Act.
Gatekeeper status brings serious obligations. Companies must follow specific rules meant to open markets to rivals and expand customer choices.
The Digital Markets Act aims to control big tech power. It targets platforms dominating digital markets and restricts their ability to favor their own products.
Microsoft’s cloud business has expanded rapidly. Azure battles directly against Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform for business customers.
The European Commission started its probe on November 21. Just seven days later, Google pulled its complaint.
Google says it will keep pushing for open cloud markets. The company intends to collaborate with policymakers and customers across multiple regions.
EU regulators will look at specific cloud sector features. They want to know if these features unfairly help the biggest players maintain their positions.
The investigation could reshape the cloud computing landscape. Microsoft and Amazon face potential restrictions if designated as gatekeepers.
Google’s withdrawal shows trust in the regulatory process. The company appears confident that EU investigators will address the anti-competitive practices Google initially flagged.
The Digital Markets Act represents Europe’s toughest tech regulation yet. It gives regulators powerful tools to force changes in how major platforms operate.
Both Microsoft and Amazon will face scrutiny over the next year. The probe’s outcome could force changes to how they sell and bundle cloud services.
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