The European Union has intensified its pressure on major U.S. technology companies, and at NewsTrackerToday we see Google once again at the center of a sweeping antitrust investigation. On Tuesday, the European Commission announced it is examining whether the company violated EU competition rules by using online content to train and deploy artificial intelligence models. Regulators aim to determine whether Google relied on publisher material and content uploaded to YouTube without fair compensation – and whether creators had any meaningful ability to opt out without losing visibility in Google Search.
The Commission said the probe will also assess whether Google distorted competition by granting itself preferential access to data while imposing unfair terms on publishers and content creators. Competition Commissioner Teresa Ribera warned that AI cannot advance at the expense of foundational principles of fairness and transparency. For Brussels, this investigation is not only about Google’s practices but about defining the limits of power in an era where AI systems consume unprecedented volumes of third-party content.
As NewsTrackerToday technology analyst Sophie Leclerc notes, the tension stems from the fundamental shift in how value is distributed: “For years, publisher content powered search. But once Google begins generating AI summaries, the balance changes – the underlying creative work becomes invisible, while the platform captures the economic upside. That asymmetry is exactly what EU regulators are targeting.”
Google counters that these complaints risk stifling innovation in an increasingly competitive AI market. A Google spokesperson argued that Europeans “deserve access to the latest technologies,” adding that restricting training data could degrade AI performance. Yet the argument may fall flat in Brussels, especially after Google was hit with a nearly €3 billion fine in September over alleged abuses in advertising technology.
Europe’s regulatory push has turned into a broader front against Big Tech. Last week, the EU opened a separate antitrust case into Meta over its policy granting AI vendors access to WhatsApp data. Days earlier, the Commission fined Elon Musk’s X €120 million for misleading design of its “blue check” system – a ruling that triggered both political backlash in the U.S. and calls from Musk to abolish the European Union altogether. At NewsTrackerToday, we observe the emergence of a coherent EU strategy: enforce a single behavioral standard across platforms, regardless of their size or political clout.
According to Ethan Cole, chief economic analyst at NewsTrackerToday, Europe’s broader objective is becoming increasingly clear: “The EU wants to establish a framework where data is not a proprietary resource held by platforms, but a regulated asset governed by transparent rules. It did this once with GDPR – and now it is attempting to do the same with AI.”
If the investigation against Google leads to new legal obligations for the use of online content, the impact will be global. Publishers could gain the right to demand compensation or fully opt out of AI training. Competing AI developers could gain a more level playing field, no longer disadvantaged by asymmetric access to data.
As we see at News Tracker Today, the Commission’s probe may become a defining moment: one that sets new boundaries on the role of Big Tech in AI markets and shapes the digital economy of Europe for years to come.