The Commission, which acts as the EU competition enforcer, has charged Google with breaching the Digital Markets Act

EU regulators are ​giving Alphabet's Google a little bit ‌more ​time to sooth their concerns after a previous proposal from the company fell short, the European Commission said on Friday.
"Google is engaging ⁠with the Commission to defend itself and in other in order to offer a solution ‌that really addresses the concerns that were raised in the case and ‌in the preliminary findings," Commission spokesperson ‌Thomas Regnier told a daily news ‌conference.
"The reality for ‌now is that solution is simply not ​strong enough. So ‌we're ​giving Google a bit ⁠more time to keep engaging with the Commission to offer a ​solution ⁠that ⁠really addresses the concerns in the interest of European businesses and European citizens," ⁠he said.
The Commission, which acts as the EU competition enforcer, has charged Google with breaching the Digital Markets Act, which aims to ‌rein in the power of Big Tech, and ​is in the midst of finalising its decision that could include a fine against Google. (Reporting by Foo Yun ​Chee, editing ‌by Inti Landauro)