Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
27MAY

DMA orders Google to open search data

4 min read
15:19UTC

Brussels sent Google preliminary DMA measures requiring it to share search rankings, queries and click data with rivals and AI chatbots on FRAND terms. A binding decision is due by 27 July.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Google must share search data with rival chatbots, an involuntary data dividend for European AI.

DG COMP and DG CNECT, the European Commission's competition and digital-strategy directorates, sent Google preliminary compliance measures on 16 April 2026 requiring it to share search rankings, user queries, click data and view metrics with rival search engines and AI chatbots on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms 1. A public consultation opened on 17 April and closes on 1 May; a binding decision is due by 27 July 2026 1. Search rankings, queries and click logs are the foundational training substrate every frontier AI assistant needs; the order is an involuntary data dividend for European AI builders who cannot scrape at Google scale.

Executive Vice-President Teresa Ribera framed the order around AI alongside search: "Data is a key input for online search and for developing new services, including AI" 1. The technical annex sets eligibility criteria, delivery frequency, anonymisation procedures and governance 1. Google responded that the demands threaten user privacy on "sensitive searches about health, family, finances" and alleged the investigation was "driven at least in part by OpenAI" 1. Google is asking Europe to read the remedy as a US-on-US proxy fight rather than a European sovereignty instrument.

The order extends the DMA lineage from platform fines to a behavioural data-access remedy. European firms that cannot scrape at Google scale, Mistral AI included, would gain an involuntary data dividend if FRAND terms survive the consultation. The 27 July binding decision deadline sits five days before the AI Office, the Commission's AI enforcement body, gains full enforcement powers over general-purpose AI model providers on 2 August . That creates a regulatory collision between competition and AI enforcement arms with no public joint pipeline connecting the two.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When you search on Google, the search engine records what you typed, which results you clicked on, and which ones you ignored. Over 25 years, Google has collected billions of these records. They tell an AI system what information people actually want when they type different queries, giving it 25 years of annotated signal that no AI company can buy or scrape from scratch at equivalent scale. The EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA) is a law that says very large tech platforms must play by special rules to keep markets fair. The European Commission has told Google it must share this search data with rival search engines and AI chatbot makers, on terms that are fair and non-discriminatory. Google argues this threatens user privacy. The Commission says it is essential for European companies to be able to build AI systems that can compete with US ones. A formal decision is due on 27 July 2026.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

European AI companies face a structural training-data deficit. Google processes roughly 8.5 billion searches per day and has accumulated two decades of annotated query-click feedback loops. Mistral AI, founded in 2023, cannot replicate that dataset through commercial scraping or licensed data partnerships at equivalent quality or volume.

The AI Act's forthcoming general-purpose AI transparency requirements will require model providers to document training data provenance and demonstrate diversity; mandated access to Google search logs addresses both the data-volume gap and the provenance documentation problem in a single remedy.

The Draghi report on European competitiveness identified data access as one of the three structural barriers to European AI parity alongside compute and talent. The DMA order on search data is the Commission's first concrete implementation of that Draghi recommendation, though it targets one specific platform's dataset rather than establishing a general European data-access framework.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 1 May consultation close and 27 July binding decision creates a 12-week implementation clock; Google's legal challenge will likely begin before the ink is dry, extending effective implementation by 12 to 18 months.

    Short term · 0.78
  • Precedent

    A sustained DMA search-data remedy would establish the principle that gatekeeper platform data constitutes quasi-public infrastructure, with implications for Meta social graph data, Apple App Store behavioural data, and Amazon marketplace data in subsequent proceedings.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Opportunity

    The binding decision landing five days before the AI Act enforcement date on 2 August creates a regulatory stack where European AI providers gain both a data-access right and an enforcement environment that disadvantages US competitors simultaneously.

    Medium term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #2 · Brussels buys, Britain backs, Google unlocks

European Commission DG CNECT· 19 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
ASML / European tech industry
ASML / European tech industry
ASML's Q2 2026 guidance came in €300m below consensus as China DUV revenue collapsed 17 percentage points; the company's CEO wrote US export-control outcomes directly into 2026 guidance. European tech firms named on the USTR retaliation list alongside SAP, Siemens and Spotify face the same calculus: US trade exposure constrains what Brussels can legislate on their behalf.
France / Anne Le Henanff
France / Anne Le Henanff
Le Henanff chaired the G7 Digital Ministerial at Bercy on 29 May with CAIDA off the agenda, pivoting France's presidency to AI safety principles it had not designed the week around. France backs CAIDA but cannot override Berlin's tariff calculus, so the ministerial produced no new French-led commitment.
Germany / Federal government
Germany / Federal government
Berlin's automotive sector faces up to $200bn in threatened US tariffs, a commercial exposure that dwarfs any benefit CAIDA's public-sector cloud rules would deliver to German digital firms. Federal silence inside the College of Commissioners functions as a block under consensus adoption rules without requiring a formal veto.
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
Puzder's public warning on 25 May that CAIDA is inconsistent with the EU-US trade framework was the first time Washington made its bilateral pressure visible before a Commission adoption vote rather than after. The USTR Section 301 determination on 24 July provides the enforcement backstop.
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
Virkkunen framed the third slip as a procedural delay in finalising a 400-page text without addressing Puzder's trade-framework red line publicly. The Commission enforces existing law against Google while losing the legislative timeline on CAIDA, exposing an asymmetric position: enforcement holds; new sovereignty legislation does not.
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.