As Big Tech scrambles to meet EU rules, investigations seen as likely
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[March 07, 2024] By
Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Google, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and TikTok
owner ByteDance have scrambled over the last six months to comply with
landmark EU tech rules that come into force on Thursday, from
overhauling online platforms to backroom engineering.
The Digital Markets Act (DMA) is one of the most comprehensive
regulatory actions to rein in so-called "Big Tech" and is expected to
reshape the global technology industry after decades of unfettered
growth.
Criticism from rivals and users and cautionary comments from watchdogs
suggest a couple of the six companies may be in the regulatory
crosshairs over potential non-compliance in the coming months.
If any of the six tech giants are not compliant with the Digital Markets
Act (DMA) by the EU's Thursday deadline, they could ultimately face
investigations and potentially fines of up to 10% of their global
turnover.
Apple is the most affected by the DMA, which forces the iPhone maker to
open up its closed ecosystem such as allowing software developers to
distribute their apps to users in the European Union outside of its own
App Store.
Yet its introduction of new fees such as a "core technology fee" of 50
euro cents per user account each year even if developers opt not to use
Apple's App Store or payment system has already caught EU antitrust
chief Margrethe Vestager's eye.
Vestager said on Monday that novel fee structures should not undermine
the incentives for businesses to switch to rivals, after handing a 1.84
billion euro ($2 billion) fine to Apple for thwarting Spotify from
showing other payment options outside its App Store. Apple has said it
will appeal the decision and declined to offer further comment.
Rivals such as Swiss email service Proton, meanwhile, have said Apple's
compliance efforts do not go far enough. The Commission declined to
comment.
With eight core platform services subject to the DMA, more than any
other company, and despite putting thousands of tech engineers to work
on its compliance efforts, Alphabet's Google also runs the risk of a
potential investigation.
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A 3D printed Facebook's new rebrand logo Meta is seen in front of
displayed Google logo in this illustration taken on November 2,
2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
The company's mandatory overhaul of its search results will benefit
aggregators such as Booking.com and Expedia, which will gain more
prominence and hence online traffic due to their intensive lobbying
with Google.
That has already caused friction with hotels, airlines and
restaurants, with some expecting to lose as much as 50% of their
online traffic and possibly millions of euros in revenues as users
are lured to large online intermediaries. Google declined to
comment.
Meta, which said Instagram and Facebook users will be asked if their
data can be shared between its services, could also run the risk of
an investigation. Meta declined to comment.
Microsoft, Amazon and ByteDance may face less scrutiny initially as
EU regulators focus their resources on one or two cases and ensure a
case able to withstand a legal challenge, people familiar with the
matter said. Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment while
ByteDance did not respond immediately to a request for comment.
Pressure for an EU investigation is also coming from the some of the
big six companies themselves.
At least one has told the European Commission that it was not fair
to have to play by the DMA rules while a rival flouts them, one
person with direct knowledge of the matter said.
Unlike EU antitrust investigations which can take years to wrap, DMA
enforcers have just a year to issue their findings.
($1 = 0.9173 euros)
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Alexander Smith, Jamie Freed
and David Evans)
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