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Google’s European Engineering Centre in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo: Reuters

US Big Tech from Alphabet to Meta brace for EU’s antitrust Digital Markets Act

  • EU regulators will announce by Wednesday a list of internet services to be targeted by the Digital Markets Act
  • They are expected to include Alphabet’s Google Search, Apple’s App Store, Amazon’s shopping site and Meta’s Facebook
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Big Tech is bracing for the European Union’s biggest-ever clampdown on anticompetitive practices in the digital economy, potentially provoking a new wave of legal battles between regulators and Silicon Valley.

By September 6, antitrust regulators will announce a list of services likely to include Alphabet’s Google Search, Apple’s App Store, Amazon.com’s marketplace and Meta Platforms’s Facebook, to be targeted by rules aimed at preventing the most powerful firms from wrecking new markets before it is too late to act.

The Digital Markets Act, or DMA, which takes effect early next year, will impose a rigid regime of dos and don’ts on firms that previously left regulators in their wake, despite multiple probes into practices that have resulted in billions of euros in fines and tax orders.

It will be illegal for certain platforms to favour their own services over those of rivals. They will be barred from combining personal data across their different services, prohibited from using data they collect from third-party merchants to compete against them, and will have to allow users to download apps from rival platforms.

The headquarters of Meta Platforms, owner of Facebook, in Menlo Park, California. Photo: AFP/Getty Images/TNS

But the groundwork has been laid for some firms to lock horns with the EU in the same courts that have heard challenges to years of ex-post – or after the fact – antitrust enforcement.

“There is likely to be litigation coming,” said Alexandre de Streel, academic director of the digital research programme at the Centre on Regulation in Europe, a think tank. “Defining the services to be covered hasn’t been as easy as had been expected.”

In a meeting between Apple and members of EU competition chief Margrethe Vestager’s cabinet on June 27, the company warned of compliance challenges with the rules, according to a copy of the meeting’s minutes obtained via a freedom of information request. The firm noted concerns over the scope of its services to be covered and how users’ experience could be safeguarded.

In a separate email chain, Apple’s lawyers call for more “substantive discussions” regarding their DMA compliance from September onwards.

Notes of a meeting between Amazon chief executive officer Andy Jassy and Vestager on June 21 disclose that the company expressed concern with “overlapping and conflicting regulation coming from national competition authorities”. The company has already challenged its designation under Germany’s own digital competition rules.

Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg also held talks with Vestager to discuss the company’s compliance, which took place in mid-June.

A visitor checks in at the Amazon corporate headquarters in Seattle, Washington. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

As for other so-called gatekeepers, Microsoft has been arguing that its Bing search engine is too small a competitor to Google to face the rules. Google itself could have questions on how its search services contend with the new rules, based on comments from the company’s top European lawyer to regulators in December.

None of the Big Tech firms had an immediate comment for Bloomberg when asked about how they intend to comply with the law. The European Commission declined to comment.

Following the commission’s announcement this week, those listed platforms then have six months to re-engineer their services to fall in line with the rules, or to make legal challenges against the designation decisions.

But while platforms may want to test the limit of the law in court, they may not have so much success, according to Christophe Carugati, affiliate fellow at the Bruegel think tank on digital and competition issues.

“Where these platform reach the necessary thresholds to come under the scope, I don’t think they’ll have a legitimate argument,” he said.

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