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Brazil regulator approves deeper probe into Google's news content use

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Brazil's CADE reopens probe into Google's use of journalistic content, citing AI features and publisher dependence, amid concerns over potential market abuse and compensation

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazil's antitrust watchdog CADE approved on Thursday a recommendation to deepen ​investigations into the use of journalistic content ‌by Alphabet's Google, which would assess potential abuse of the company's dominant market position.

CADE's members backed a proposal from ​its interim chief Diogo Thomson de Andrade ​to return the case to its general ⁠superintendence for formal administrative proceedings, citing the evolution ​of Google's conduct since the 2019 inquiry began.

The case ​began following CADE's 2019 determination to examine competitive conditions in search and news markets.

Initial investigation focused on Google's automated ​collection of journalistic content and its display in ​search results.

CADE's general superintendence had previously recommended shelving the case ‌for ⁠lack of sufficient evidence of violations.

NEW FINDINGS

De Andrade's new analysis noted Google's conduct evolved with AI generative features that synthesize information directly in search interfaces.

It ​highlighted the ​potential structural ⁠dependency of news publishers on Google's search mechanisms for audience reach.

De Andrade pointed ​out this could constitute exploitative abuse ​through ⁠extracting value from third-party content without proportional compensation.

Google said in a statement it believes CADE's decision reflects ⁠a "misunderstanding" ​of how its products work, ​adding it will continue to engage to address any questions. 

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