EU ushers in brave new world of Big Tech
regulation
The Digital Markets Act clamps down on abuses in the
platform economy.
BY SAMUEL
STOLTON
March 25,
2022 8:43 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-landmark-rules-big-tech-anti-trust-digital-markets-act-dma/
The
European Union has opened a new chapter in antitrust enforcement for the
digital economy, adopting a raft of new rules designed to clamp down on abuses
by some of the world’s largest tech firms.
In a deal
brokered Thursday evening, officials from the European Parliament, Council and
Commission concluded 15 months of intense negotiations on a new rulebook for
Big Tech giants operating in the European market, the Digital Markets Act.
Google,
Amazon, Meta, Apple, Microsoft and other global players such as accommodation
outfit Booking and Chinese e-commerce player Alibaba will come under the scope
of the Digital Markets Act, which introduces a series of dos and don’ts for tech
firms' behavior across digital markets. A final list of firms will now be drawn
up by the Commission.
The rules'
scope will encompass platforms — so-called gatekeepers — with a market
capitalization of €75 billion or turnover in the European Economic Area equal
to or above €7.5 billion. Affected platforms will also need to have 45 million
active end-users and 10,000 yearly active business users.
“The
gatekeepers will now have to comply with a well-defined set of obligations and
prohibitions,” European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager
said. “This regulation, together with strong competition law enforcement, will
bring fairer conditions to consumers and businesses for many digital services
across the EU.”
For their
part, the tech giants will be under intense pressure to update their products
and services to comply with rules. After the expected final approval by
Parliament and Council, which will come imminently, the text will enter into
force 20 days after, and the rules will become applicable six months after that
date.
"These
rules are key to stimulating and unlocking digital markets, enhancing consumer
choice, enabling better value sharing in the digital economy and boosting
innovation. The European Union is the first to take such decisive action,"
said Cédric O, French minister of state with responsibility for digital.
The new
rules outlaw certain anti-competitive practices for which Big Tech companies
have come under fire in the past, such as combining user data from a number of
different sources — something the German competition authority accused Facebook
of in 2019 — as well as new requirements for operating systems to open up to
third-party apps — giving iPhone users, for example, more flexibility in
deciding what programs to install on their phones.
"Consumers
will get the choice to use the core services of big tech companies such as
browsers, search engines or messaging, and all that without losing control over
their data," said Andreas Schwab, lead MEP on the file.
Tech giants
will also be prevented from bundling services together, such as Google’s past
actions of pre-installing Chrome on Android devices. Users should also be
prompted upon first using a tech firm's service that they have the option of
using a competitor — a move that may give users more choice when deciding
whether to use an alternative browser on their mobile device, for example.
Moreover,
interoperability rules to allow users to communicate across different messaging
services, such as WhatsApp and Signal, were also approved.
Ex-ante
intervention
While EU
competition regulators have in the past always played catch-up when it came to
reining in these abusive practices, the DMA now outlaws such conduct outright,
which is intended to help smaller players to compete against larger companies.
“We are
witnessing a shift from a punitive system, where large corporations are
punished through fines and court systems, to one that also cuts the power off
at the source,” said Marco Carlizzi, partner at RSM Legal Group.
“This new
approach will facilitate the development of smaller digital companies that
previously struggled to break into the market.”
For its
part, the tech lobby highlighted certain reservations about the DMA text after
its adoption on Thursday evening, calling for a seat at the table to hash out
an agreement on how some of the technical details of the rules could be agreed
upon.
“There are
still several parts of the text that lack clarity, so we urge the European
Commission to collaborate with industry players to help them clarify and apply
them in a sensible way to ensure we get the best results,” said Cecilia
Bonefeld-Dahl, director general of the tech lobby DigitalEurope, which
represents players like Amazon, Apple, Facebook's parent company Meta and
Google.
“Several of
the new rules will require major technical and legal work, such as the
interoperability requirements and data-sharing obligations,” she added.
Big Tech’s
lobby efforts fall flat
Since its
initial proposal in December 2020, the DMA had been subject to a significant
lobbying push from Big Tech, with Apple CEO Tim Cook even saying at one point
that the efforts would “destroy the security of the iPhone.” Meta’s president
of global affairs, Nick Clegg, has said that the rules would “fossilize”
innovation in the digital economy.
On Thursday
evening, Apple repeated its concerns that the rules could open up security
vulnerabilities.
“We remain
concerned that some provisions of the DMA will create unnecessary privacy and
security vulnerabilities for our users while others will prohibit us from
charging for intellectual property in which we invest a great deal,” a
spokesperson said.
Moreover,
there had been a growing sense of skepticism from Washington about the rules,
despite President Joe Biden's administration adopting more of a progressive
approach to antitrust enforcement in the digital economy.
A series of
letters had been dispatched from U.S. government departments to Brussels
lawmakers, highlighting concerns that the move disproportionately affected
American businesses. That narrative, however — which primarily came from the
U.S. Commerce Department — was eventually toned down, after the White House
came out in support of clamping down on Big Tech abuses.
The clock
now starts ticking down to identify the platforms that will be subject to the
rules before formal enforcement procedures begin. This will require the
Commission to reshuffle staff to ensure there is sufficient capacity for the
work.
Previous
estimates had predicted 80 members of staff in the Commission would work on
enforcement of the DMA, but this is one area in which lead MEP Schwab had been
consistently critical, penning a recent letter in which he called for at least
220 posts to be created in the EU executive.
The
Commission will be under a tight deadline to effectively enforce the DMA, with
the list of prohibitions and obligations becoming applicable to firms within
the DMA's scope likely toward the end of this year.
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