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UK moves to curb Google’s search dominance under new Big Tech powers

Britain’s competition regulator has designated Google as having strategic market status in online search — a landmark ruling that gives the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) sweeping new powers to reshape how the tech giant operates in the UK.

The CMA said Google controls over 90% of all UK search traffic, cementing a dominant position in both search and search advertising. The designation, announced Friday, does not imply wrongdoing but allows the regulator to intervene directly to ensure fairer competition and impose fines for non-compliance.

The CMA outlined potential changes earlier this year, including fairer ranking systems, easier switching to alternative search engines, and greater publisher control over how their content is used in AI-generated responses. These measures could particularly affect Google’s AI Overviews and AI Mode features, though its Gemini AI assistant remains outside the current scope.

Google’s Senior Director for Competition, Oliver Bethell, argued the proposals “would inhibit UK innovation and growth” at a time of “profound AI-based innovation.” The company recently announced a £5 billion investment in Britain.

The ruling marks the CMA’s first use of its expanded Big Tech authority, introduced to address the dominance of firms like Google, Apple, and Amazon. The regulator’s second probe—into mobile operating systems—could also lead to another designation targeting Android.

The move follows mounting global scrutiny: the EU fined Google $3.45 billion for antitrust violations in ad tech last month, while U.S. regulators are pressing to break up parts of its advertising empire.

Competition lawyer Tom Smith, a former CMA director, said the decision could rebalance the market by “giving website operators more control over how their content is used for AI training,” curbing Google’s advantage in artificial intelligence.

OpenAI warns EU regulators of Big Tech dominance in AI market

OpenAI has raised competition concerns with European Union regulators, warning that entrenched tech giants such as Google are using their market power to dominate the fast-growing artificial intelligence sector.

The company confirmed Thursday that its arguments to EU officials last month “mirrored its public positions” on the need to ensure fair competition in AI. During a September 24 meeting with EU antitrust chief Teresa Ribera, OpenAI said it faced major hurdles competing against vertically integrated platforms that control both infrastructure and distribution, according to meeting notes cited by Bloomberg News.

The firm urged regulators to prevent large companies from “locking in users” through their ecosystems — a reference to concerns that firms like Alphabet and Microsoft could tie AI products to existing search, cloud, and software services.

The European Commission has already been investigating how major technology platforms are extending dominance into AI through intercompany agreements and exclusive data access. Neither the Commission nor Google responded to requests for comment.

OpenAI’s outreach to EU authorities comes as it cements its own global influence. Following a secondary share sale last week, the ChatGPT-maker is now valued at $500 billion, making it the world’s most valuable startup with over 800 million weekly users.

Analysts say the move signals that OpenAI wants to shape the regulatory debate in Europe — not only to challenge rivals like Google and Anthropic, but also to secure its place in a market increasingly defined by antitrust scrutiny and AI sovereignty policies.

Google says over 100 firms likely hit in Oracle-linked hacking campaign

Google warned that more than 100 companies may have been compromised in a massive cyberattack targeting Oracle’s E-Business Suite, a core system used by corporations to manage supply chains, customer data, and manufacturing operations.

In a statement released Thursday, Google said “mass amounts of customer data” were stolen in the attack, which may have begun three months ago. The company attributed the breach to the CL0P ransomware group, known for large-scale cyber intrusions exploiting third-party software vulnerabilities.

“This level of investment suggests the threat actor dedicated significant resources to pre-attack research,” Google’s cybersecurity division said. Analyst Austin Larsen added that while dozens of victims have been confirmed, “based on the scale of previous CL0P campaigns, it is likely there are over a hundred.”

The breach appears to have targeted Oracle’s E-Business Suite, used by corporations worldwide to manage sensitive operations including logistics, customer relations, and payments. Oracle has not publicly commented beyond acknowledging ongoing extortion attempts against some clients.

CL0P, which has previously claimed responsibility for major data thefts, told Reuters earlier this week that Oracle had “bugged up their core product.” The group is reportedly threatening to publish stolen data unless ransom demands are met.

Cyber experts say the scale of the attack could rival the MOVEit hack of 2023, underlining the growing risk of supply chain breaches that exploit trusted enterprise software systems.