Despite Trump's threats, the EU fines Google nearly 3 billion euros

By The New Obs with AFP
Google was fined €2.95 billion by the EU on September 5, 2025. SEBASTIEN BOZON / AFP
After a week of procrastination and ignoring threats from Donald Trump , the European Commission announced on Friday, September 5, that it was imposing a fine of 2.95 billion euros on Google. The European executive considered that the American tech giant had abused its dominant position in the online advertising sector.
This sanction, which Google immediately announced it would contest, was highly anticipated.
The Commission had threatened in 2023 to require the splitting of part of the group's activities in this area of online advertising (or "Adtech"), which it has not ultimately decided to do at this stage.
Also read
Interview: Replacing Google Meet with Digital Samba: "I tried to stop American technologies, it's almost impossible"
The announcement of this sanction against the American giant had been delayed at the beginning of the week, against a backdrop of tensions between the EU and the United States, as a source within the Commission confirmed to AFP on Wednesday.
Google deplores a "bad" decisionOn August 26, Donald Trump vigorously attacked countries and organizations regulating the tech sector, threatening them with customs duties and export restrictions.
While he did not directly cite the European Union, it actually has the most powerful legal arsenal in the world for regulating digital technology, fueling debates in Europe about the risk of retaliation in the event of sanctions against American companies. The EU retorted that it had the "sovereign right" to regulate tech.
In a statement to AFP, Google denounced the Commission's sanction. "The European Commission's decision on our adtech services is wrong and we will appeal it. It imposes an unjustified fine on us, and changes that will harm thousands of European businesses by making it harder for them to make money," said Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google's vice president of regulatory affairs.
Also read
Chronicle: Google, Facebook, YouTube… The dirty secrets of online advertising