3rdPartyFeeds

Tech Giants Risk Breakup Under Strict EU Digital Rules

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. and other major tech platforms that treat their own services more favorably, at the expense of rivals, could be forced to sell businesses and pay billion-dollar fines under strict rules unveiled by the European Union.Under the EU’s new Digital Markets Act, companies deemed to be so-called “gatekeepers” won’t be allowed to rank their offerings above rivals on their own platforms, or use competitors’ data to compete with them, according to the new regulation released on Tuesday.Companies like Amazon.com Inc, Apple Inc. or Alphabet Inc.’s Google could face fines of as much as 10% of their revenue in Europe if they don’t comply, while a company that has repeatedly breached the rules could face orders to divest businesses, confirming a Bloomberg report on Monday. Gatekeepers will also need to inform regulators about smaller acquisitions that would otherwise fall below traditional merger review thresholds.The separate Digital Services Act could also foresee fines as high as 6% of revenue for social media platforms if they don’t comply with orders to remove terror propaganda or other illegal posts, along with other obligations such as carrying out reviews of systemic risks to their sites. The U.K., which left the bloc earlier this year, also announced similar rules on Tuesday.The regulations are some of the strictest set of technology rules to be proposed by the EU and aim to quash bad behavior by powerful platforms they see as posing a threat to the bloc’s society and economic markets. They could hamstring platforms from entering into new markets and tightly control how they develop new services.The commission declined to list companies that would be determined gatekeepers, but an internal review published separately on Tuesday showed a list of unfair practices based both on antitrust investigations and complaints raised by interviewees responding to the EU’s survey.The study lists, among others, unfair contract terms by Apple with its app store and by Booking.com, as well as anti-competitive use of third party data by Amazon in its marketplace. It also flags Apple, Amazon and Booking as charging potentially excessive commissions.EU officials say the gatekeeper regulation will complement antitrust regulation, and hopefully speed up investigations, by putting the onus on large players to not to engage in anti-competitive behavior instead of placing the burden on antitrust enforcers to prove their practices breach the law.Companies will in part be deemed gatekeepers if annual revenue in Europe in the last three years is equal to or above 6.5 billion euros ($7.9 billion), or if average market capitalization in the last financial year amounted to at least 65 billion euros and the company provides a core service in at least three European countries. The EU said it will also look at whether a company controls distribution for business users, based on whether the platform has more than 45 million monthly active end users in Europe and more than 10,000 yearly active business users.Under the Digital Services Act, platforms would face a sliding scale of obligations based on their size. Very large online...

(Bloomberg) — U.S. and other major tech platforms that treat their own services more favorably, at the expense of rivals, could be forced to sell businesses and pay billion-dollar fines under strict rules unveiled by the European Union.

Under the EU’s new Digital Markets Act, companies deemed to be so-called “gatekeepers” won’t be allowed to rank their offerings above rivals on their own platforms, or use competitors’ data to compete with them, according to the new regulation released on Tuesday.

Companies like Amazon.com Inc, Apple Inc. or Alphabet Inc.’s Google could face fines of as much as 10% of their revenue in Europe if they don’t comply, while a company that has repeatedly breached the rules could face orders to divest businesses, confirming a Bloomberg report on Monday. Gatekeepers will also need to inform regulators about smaller acquisitions that would otherwise fall below traditional merger review thresholds.

The separate Digital Services Act could also foresee fines as high as 6% of revenue for social media platforms if they don’t comply with orders to remove terror propaganda or other illegal posts, along with other obligations such as carrying out reviews of systemic risks to their sites. The U.K., which left the bloc earlier this year, also announced similar rules on Tuesday.

The regulations are some of the strictest set of technology rules to be proposed by the EU and aim to quash bad behavior by powerful platforms they see as posing a threat to the bloc’s society and economic markets. They could hamstring platforms from entering into new markets and tightly control how they develop new services.

The commission declined to list companies that would be determined gatekeepers, but an internal review published separately on Tuesday showed a list of unfair practices based both on antitrust investigations and complaints raised by interviewees responding to the EU’s survey.

The study lists, among others, unfair contract terms by Apple with its app store and by Booking.com, as well as anti-competitive use of third party data by Amazon in its marketplace. It also flags Apple, Amazon and Booking as charging potentially excessive commissions.

EU officials say the gatekeeper regulation will complement antitrust regulation, and hopefully speed up investigations, by putting the onus on large players to not to engage in anti-competitive behavior instead of placing the burden on antitrust enforcers to prove their practices breach the law.

Companies will in part be deemed gatekeepers if annual revenue in Europe in the last three years is equal to or above 6.5 billion euros ($7.9 billion), or if average market capitalization in the last financial year amounted to at least 65 billion euros and the company provides a core service in at least three European countries. The EU said it will also look at whether a company controls distribution for business users, based on whether the platform has more than 45 million monthly active end users in Europe and more than 10,000 yearly active business users.

Under the Digital Services Act, platforms would face a sliding scale of obligations based on their size. Very large online platforms will have to adhere to additional rules, including assessing risks of social harm such as the manipulation of their system to propagate inauthentic material.

The legislation also clarifies that platforms won’t be made liable for any content posted to their sites unless they’ve been made of aware of it. If a platform pro-actively identifies illegal material to take it down, they wouldn’t be exposed to greater liability, the EU said.

The commission proposals will still need sign-off from the bloc’s other lawmaking institutions, including the European Parliament and the Council of European member states, before they become law.

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

Subscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

Read More

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment