On 13 November 2025, the European Commission formally launched an investigation into Google’s search practices, following complaints that some news media websites were being unfairly demoted or buried in Google Search results.
The probe focuses on Google’s so-called “site reputation abuse policy.” According to the Commission, there are indications that the policy is being used to push down media outlets’ content especially those that publish articles containing commercial content, such as sponsored editorials or content shared with third-party partners.
Because many publishers rely on such collaborations and sponsored content to monetize journalism especially in an era when ad revenues are under pressure the demotion could significantly harm their visibility, traffic, and ultimately income.
The investigation is being carried out under the bloc’s Digital Markets Act (DMA), which mandates that dominant online platforms (so-called “digital gatekeepers”) treat business users including news publishers fairly, reasonably, and non-discriminatorily.
What the EU Is Looking At: Allegations Under the Microscope
Demoting News Sites With “Sponsored” or Commercial Content
At the heart of the probe is the claim that Google’s anti-spam / site-reputation rules are being applied in a way that suppresses legitimate journalism, not just spam or low-quality content. According to the Commission, when news outlets publish content involving commercial partners (ads, sponsored articles, affiliate links), Google may reduce their discoverability in search results.
This is contentious, because such monetization strategies are a long-standing and legitimate way for media organizations to generate revenue especially when traditional ad and subscription earnings are declining.
Loss of Visibility, Traffic & Revenue for Publishers
If Google’s suppression results in lower search visibility, publishers may see sharp drops in traffic which typically translates into lower ad revenue, fewer subscriptions, and overall financial stress. This comes at a time when many media companies are already under economic pressure. The Commission flagged concerns that this suppression could undercut the “freedom to conduct legitimate business” for news publishers.
Compliance Obligations Under the DMA
Under the Digital Markets Act, Google as a dominant platform has a legal duty to provide “fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory” access to its services for third-party businesses. If the investigation finds Google applied its site-reputation policy in a way that disadvantages publishers unfairly, it could constitute a breach of the DMA.
If violations are confirmed, Google faces potential penalties including fines up to 10% of its global annual turnover under DMA provisions.
What Google Says: Defense and Pushback
Google has strongly rejected the claims. The company argues that its “site reputation abuse policy” is designed to protect users from low-quality, spammy or deceptive content especially where third-party or promotional content is concerned.
In a blog post, Google Search’s chief scientist said the investigation is “misguided and risks harming millions of European users.”
Google further argues that allowing paid or promotional content of potentially dubious quality to outrank genuinely high-quality journalism would damage the trustworthiness of search results.
Moreover, Google points to a recent German court ruling, which it says affirmed that its anti-spam policy was “valid, reasonable and applied consistently.” This past judgment forms a central part of Google’s defense.
What Happens Next: Timeline, Implications, and What’s at Stake
- According to the Commission, the investigation should be concluded within 12 months meaning by late 2026 we may see either a clearance or regulatory penalty.
- If Google is found in breach of the DMA, consequences could range from heavy fines (up to 10% of global revenue) to enforced changes in its search algorithms or ranking rules.
- For publishers especially smaller or mid-sized outlets, the case could determine how much freedom they have to monetize through partnerships and sponsored content, without risking being suppressed by search algorithms.
- For news consumers depending on how the probe resolves, it could affect which results appear in their searches, potentially influencing what news people see.
Journalism, Tech Power, and the Future of News
This probe goes beyond a regulatory spat, it’s reflective of deeper structural tensions in how news media survives in a digital era dominated by a few large platforms.
- Power imbalance: Google acts as a “gatekeeper” controlling access to billions of users. If it can effectively determine which publishers get visibility (and which do not), that grants it enormous influence over the economic viability of media outlets.
- Media sustainability: Many news organizations rely on diversified revenue including sponsored content, affiliate links, and partnerships. If such content is suppressed, it may deprive them of crucial income streams, threatening press viability and diversity.
- Regulatory precedent: The EU by invoking the DMA is signaling that platform dominance will not go unchecked. The outcome of this investigation could set a precedent for how other Big Tech firms are regulated when it comes to content, ranking policies, and fairness.
- Public interest and information flow: If certain types of journalism become less visible, it may shape public discourse, influence what information people encounter, and affect democratic engagement especially in countries where independent media struggle economically.
The EU’s investigation into Google’s suppression of news outlets represents a potentially consequential moment in the relationship between Big Tech and journalism. On one side, Google defends its practices as necessary to combat spam and ensure quality. On the other, publishers and regulators argue those very practices could undermine media freedom, competition, and the financial viability of journalism.
What happens next over the coming 12 months will likely reverberate well beyond Europe. It could influence how search engines treat journalism globally, how publishers monetize digital news, and how regulatory frameworks curb or shape the power of digital “gatekeepers.”




