UK orders Google to improve transparency for search services
The United Kingdomโs competition โ watchdog has ordered Google to provide greater transparency on how its search rankings work, as part of new rules addressing concerns over the US โ tech giantโs dominance in the sector. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) on Wednesday sai
The United Kingdomโs competition โ watchdog has ordered Google to provide greater transparency on how its search rankings work, as part of new rules addressing concerns over the US โ tech giantโs dominance in the sector.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) on Wednesday said Google must rank organic search results using objective criteria, increase transparency around rankings, introduce clearer complaint processes and allow users to transfer their search data to authorised third parties.
Under the new requirements, Google must rank results using โobjective and non-discriminatory criteriaโ and give businesses more information about how rankings work.
CMA Executive Director Digital Markets Will Hayter said that โstep by step, weโre ensuring that Googleโs search services work better for businesses and consumers across the UK.โ
โSearch is a vital gateway for businesses in the UK to reach customers, and clearer, predictable and more transparent ranking systems could give them greater scope to expand and invest,โ Hayter said.
The new measures build on existing requirements โ announced by the regulator earlier this month, which enable publishers to prevent their content from being used to power Googleโs AI features.
The CMA designated Google with โstrategic market statusโ last year, subjecting it to special requirements under new targeted measures focused on technology giants.
Google has โ six months to implement the fair ranking requirement, and three โ months for the data portability requirement, the CMA said. The US company accounts for โ more than 90 percent of UK search queries.

