Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt told a U.S. Senate panel Wednesday that the company faces tough competition and isn’t using its dominance in internet search to stifle competitors.
Schmidt is testifying at a hearing examining whether Google is abusing its power to thwart competition by placing links to its own content and services at the top of search results to the disadvantage of its rivals’ links.
Schmidt told lawmakers that the internet search giant won’t make the same mistakes as Microsoft, which was curbed by the government several years ago when it was deemed to be exercising monopoly power.
Consumers will correct mistakes the company makes, he said. Schmidt insisted that Google could easily be unseated by better technology because competition is only a “click away” on the internet.
Google’s dominance of internet search and advertising has put the company under regulatory scrutiny that is making it more difficult to expand its empire. A broad inquiry by the Federal Trade Commission into Google’s business practices could turn into a lengthy legal ordeal that becomes a major distraction for the company.
Schmidt asked the members of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on antitrust for their help to ensure the FTC’s investigation is “focused and fair.”
Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., processes about two of every three online search requests in the U.S. and an even larger percentage in some parts of Europe. Its search results already highlight sone of its own specialized services, including online mapping, video and finance.
“It’s also possible to not use Google search,” Schmidt told the panel.
The company also has faced complaints that it sometimes tries to rig its results in a way that forces advertisers to pay higher prices to ensure their links are displayed.
Schmidt faced some skepticism from senators. Panel Chairman Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., said he approaches the issue with an open mind. But, Kohl stressed, “We also need to recognize that, as the dominant firm in Internet search, Google has special obligations under antitrust law to not deploy its market power to squelch competition.”
Hundreds of thousands of businesses depend on Google “to grow and prosper,” Kohl said.
Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., said he was concerned that Google’s unrivaled growth and success could mean the next internet entrepreneurs could be squeezed out of competing with the giant.
Schmidt also was challenged on Google’s formula for ranking searches, which he said is changed every 12 hours or so.
Schmidt’s appearance is being followed by a separate panel that’s likely to skewer Google’s behaviour as unfair and, possibly, illegal.