Techsoma Homepage
  • Policy & Regulations
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Reports
  • Policy & Regulations
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Reports
Home Global News

EU Begins Antitrust Probe into Google’s AI Content Practices

by Faith Amonimo
December 11, 2025
in Global News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Techsoma Africa

The European Union just declared war on Google’s AI empire. The European Commission accused Google of stealing web content and YouTube videos to power its AI tools without paying creators a cent. This probe targets Google’s AI Overviews feature, which generates instant summaries above search results in over 100 countries.

EU Competition Commissioner Teresa Ribera pulled no punches in her announcement. “Google may be abusing its dominant position as a search engine to impose unfair trading conditions on publishers by using their online content to provide its own AI-powered services,” she declared.

Google faces fines up to 10% of its global revenue if found guilty. With Alphabet reporting $307 billion in revenue for 2023, that penalty could reach $30 billion.

Publishers Claim Google Broke the Internet’s Basic Deal

The investigation stems from a complaint filed by independent publishers in July 2025. These media companies argue that Google violated the web’s fundamental bargain.

“Google has broken the bargain that underpins the internet,” said lawyer Tim Cowen, who represents the Independent Publishers Alliance and Movement for an Open Web. “The deal was that websites would be indexed, retrieved and shown when relevant to a query. Everyone had a chance.”

Now publishers say Google keeps users on its platform instead. The company’s AI Overviews appear above traditional links, potentially reducing traffic to original sources. Publishers claim Google trains its AI models on their content without permission or payment.

“Now it puts its AI Overviews first and adds insult to injury by exploiting website content to train its AI models,” Cowen added. “AI Overviews are search’s evil twin.”

RELATED: 

EU Publishers Sue Google AI Overviews Over Traffic Losses

Google Fights Back: Claims AI Search Isn’t the Traffic Killer Critics Say It Is

YouTube Creators Left Out of AI Gold Rush

The EU probe extends beyond news websites to YouTube, where Google allegedly uses uploaded videos to train its AI systems without compensating creators. The Commission expressed concern that Google doesn’t remunerate YouTube content creators for using their videos in AI development.

This investigation examines whether Google grants itself privileged access to YouTube content while blocking rival AI developers from the same material. The Commission noted that competing AI companies cannot access YouTube content for their own model training.

Google pushed back against the allegations. “This complaint risks stifling innovation in a market that is more competitive than ever,” a Google spokesperson told news outlets. “Europeans deserve to benefit from the latest technologies and we will continue to work closely with the news and creative industries as they transition to the AI era.”

Google’s European Legal Troubles Mount

This marks Google’s fifth major EU antitrust case since 2010. The company has already paid over $8 billion in European fines for various competition violations.

In September 2025, the EU fined Google nearly $3 billion for distorting competition in advertising technology. Previous penalties include $4.3 billion for Android restrictions in 2018, $2.7 billion for search bias in 2017, and $1.7 billion for advertising practices in 2019.

The timing puts additional pressure on Google as regulators worldwide scrutinize AI development. The company faces similar concerns in other jurisdictions about data scraping and content compensation.

AI Industry Faces Copyright Reckoning

Google’s troubles reflect tensions between AI companies and content creators. Publishers, artists, and writers challenge how AI systems access their work for training data.

The investigation comes as companies developing AI models face multiple copyright lawsuits from publishers and creators seeking compensation. Major news organizations have begun blocking AI crawlers from their websites or demanding licensing fees.

Some media companies have struck deals with AI developers. The New York Times, Associated Press, and Reuters have signed licensing agreements with various AI companies. However, many smaller publishers lack negotiating power for similar arrangements.

The EU’s focus on fair compensation could establish precedents for AI training data globally. Success in this case might force other AI companies to pay for content access, fundamentally changing industry economics.

Brussels Targets Big Tech’s AI Dominance

The Google investigation joins a broader EU crackdown on American tech giants’ AI ambitions. Last week, regulators opened a probe into Meta’s WhatsApp AI policies. The Commission also fined Elon Musk’s X platform $140 million for advertising transparency violations.

These actions reflect European concerns about Big Tech’s control over emerging AI technologies. Officials worry dominant platforms could use their existing advantages to crush competition in artificial intelligence markets.

The Commission will investigate whether Google’s practices place rival AI developers at a disadvantage by limiting their access to training data. This examination could reshape competitive dynamics in the rapidly growing AI sector.

The probe has no set timeline, but EU antitrust investigations typically last 12-24 months. Google can challenge any eventual fine in European courts, though the company has lost most previous appeals.

For publishers and content creators, this investigation represents a potential turning point in their battle for fair compensation in the AI era. The outcome could determine whether tech giants must pay for the content that powers their next-generation services.

Faith Amonimo

Faith Amonimo

Moyo Faith Amonimo is a Tech Writer and Newsletter Editor at Techsoma Africa, where she reports on technology and digital...

Recommended For You

Elon Musk OpenAI lawsuit
Artificial Intelligence

Elon Musk vs. OpenAI: The Trial That Could Redefine the Future of Artificial Intelligence

by Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola
April 27, 2026

The battle lines have been drawn in what is rapidly shaping up to be the most consequential technology trial of a generation. Jury selection commenced today, April 27, 2026, officially...

Read moreDetails
Whatsapp Logo

WhatsApp Tests Plus With More Style and Better Chat Control

April 23, 2026
Techsoma Africa

OpenAI Builds a Smarter ChatGPT With Hiro, a New $100 Pro Tier, and Careful Ad Plans

April 22, 2026
John Ternus Apple CEO

Tim Cook to Step Down as Apple CEO, Hardware Chief John Ternus Named Successor

April 20, 2026
Lovable AI data breach

Vibe-Coding Nightmare: How a BOLA Vulnerability Left Lovable’s Top Users Wide Open

April 20, 2026
Next Post
Techsoma Africa

Google Announces AI-powered Smart Glasses Launching in 2026

Techsoma Africa

Nasdaq’s 2025 Milestone Makers: Meet the 11 EdTech Founders Shaping the Future of Learning

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

MTN shareholders pressure ahead of AGM

MTN Executive Pay Faces Shareholder Pushback Ahead of May Annual General Meeting

April 29, 2026
ai-layoffs-in-tech-real-reason-behind-the-cuts

The Real Story Behind Job Layoffs and Why Your Skills Still Matter

April 28, 2026
Online betting regulation in Africa

How Africa Is Taking Back Control of Online Betting

April 28, 2026
Kiwe Co-founders

Kiwe wins final CBE approval to launch its app and card in Egypt

April 28, 2026
Mastercard LOGO

Mastercard is scaling up in South Africa as faster payments and fintech deals grow

April 28, 2026
Techsoma Africa

Techsoma Africa reports on startups, fintech, AI, digital policy, and the builders shaping Africa’s innovation economy.

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Company

About

Contact

Advertise

Site Map

Coverage

Startups

Fintech

Artificial Intelligence

Reports

Resources

Privacy Policy

RSS Feed

News Sitemap

Policy & Regulations

Copyright 2026 Techsoma Africa. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Reports
  • Policy & Regulations
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise

Copyright 2026 Techsoma Africa. All rights reserved.