The new regulator will examine competitive practices, the
protection of personal data, and make anti-trust
recommendations, according to a presentation made at a
government advisory panel on Wednesday.
The new body will also draw up new guidelines to evaluate
whether mergers and acquisitions will lead to a monopoly on
messaging data or personal data.
The government hopes to finalize the plans for the new regulator
by the summer, but it is still uncertain when it will become
fully operational.
Japan's move is part of a global trend toward tighter anti-trust
regulations for major technology companies, which critics say
have been allowed to dominate search, social media, and
e-commerce with little oversight.
At the meeting on Wednesday, bureaucrats gave a presentation to
cabinet ministers showing how Facebook, Google, Amazon.com,
China's e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd and China's
top search engine Baidu Inc have increased influence by
expanding into payment systems, retail shops, self-driving cars,
drones, and interconnected devices.
The growth of the digital economy does have some merits, such as
making it easier to reach new customers and generate profits at
lower costs, according to the presentation.
But, it said some big technology companies could abuse their
influence with arbitrary search results, high fees, sudden
changes to terms of usage, and unfair contracts with suppliers.
Japanese officials also discussed two specific cases in recent
years when the European Union fined Facebook and Google for
practices regulators ruled to be in violation of anti-trust
rules.
India's antitrust commission is looking into accusations that
Alphabet Inc's unit Google abuses its popular Android mobile
operating system to block its rivals, four sources with direct
knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.
Last week, Germany's anti-trust watchdog ordered Facebook to
curb its data collection practices in a landmark ruling.
Facebook has said it will appeal the decision.
Public trust in big technology companies has waned, fueled by
last year's Cambridge Analytica scandal in which tens of
millions of Facebook profiles were harvested without their
users' consent.
(Reporting by Stanley White; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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