THE DIGITAL MARKETS ACT

EU announces Big Tech crackdown, demands interoperability between platforms

Lawmakers agree on Digital Markets Act to regulate Big Tech; final votes still 
pending.

By JON BRODKIN - 3/26/2022 
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2022/03/eu-to-regulate-gatekeepers-in-crackdown-on-google-apple-amazon-facebook/


European regulators have agreed on a Digital Markets Act that would impose a 
variety of new requirements on Big Tech companies classified as "gatekeepers." 
Final votes on the legislation are still pending.

"The text provisionally agreed by Parliament and Council negotiators targets 
large companies providing so-called 'core platform services' most prone to 
unfair business practices, such as social networks or search engines, with a 
market capitalization of at least 75 billion euro or an annual turnover of 7.5 
billion," a European Parliament announcement said yesterday.

"To be designated as 'gatekeepers,' these companies must also provide certain 
services such as browsers, messengers, or social media, which have at least 45 
million monthly end users in the EU and 10,000 annual business users."

Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook owner Meta, and Microsoft would apparently have 
to comply with the new rules.

"The Digital Markets Act puts an end to the ever-increasing dominance of Big 
Tech companies. From now on, they must show that they also allow for fair 
competition on the Internet," said Andreas Schwab, a member of the European 
Parliament from Germany and rapporteur for Parliament's Internal Market and 
Consumer Protection Committee.

EU lawmakers agreed that big messaging services such as Whatsapp, Facebook 
Messenger, and Apple's iMessage "will have to open up and interoperate with 
smaller messaging platforms, if they so request.  Users of small or big 
platforms would then be able to exchange messages, send files, or make video 
calls across messaging apps, thus giving them more choice," the European 
Parliament's announcement said.

The wording makes it unclear whether the biggest messaging apps would have to 
work with each other or just with smaller competitors.

Legislators agreed that specific interoperability requirements for social 
networks "will be assessed in the future."

Another provision says that "combining personal data for targeted advertising 
will only be allowed with explicit consent to the gatekeeper."

"If a gatekeeper does not comply with the rules, the [European] Commission can 
impose fines of up to 10 percent of its total worldwide turnover in the 
preceding financial year, and 20 percent in case of repeated infringements.

In case of systematic infringements, the Commission may ban them from acquiring 
other companies for a certain time," the announcement said.

App Store alternatives

The Hollywood Reporter described some of the practical impacts of the new rules:

"Apple, for example, will have to allow alternatives to its App Store for 
downloading apps and allow payment methods for the App Store other than Apple's 
own," the article said.

It continued:

Google and Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, will no longer 
be able to offer targeted ads across multiple platforms—using data gathered as 
users move between services owned by the same company, YouTube and Google 
Search, for example, without receiving explicit consent.

Amazon will be barred from using data collected from outside sellers on its 
services to offer competing products, a practice already the subject of a 
separate EU antitrust investigation.

The legislation text still needs to be "finalized at [the] technical level and 
checked by lawyer-linguists" and then approved by the European Parliament and 
Council, the Parliament announcement said.

The Digital Markets Act would then "come into force 20 days after its 
publication in the EU Official Journal and the rules will apply six months 
after."

EU lists dos and don’ts for gatekeeper companies

In addition to the market cap criteria noted above, companies designated as 
gatekeepers would "control one or more core platform services in at least three 
member states," with those core services including "marketplaces and app 
stores, search engines, social networking, cloud services, advertising 
services, voice assistants, and web browsers," according to a European Council 
press release.

Small and medium-sized companies "are exempt from being identified as 
gatekeepers, apart from in exceptional cases," the press release said. 
Companies that object to being designated as gatekeepers "can challenge the 
designation by means of a specific procedure that enables the Commission to 
check the validity of those arguments," the release said.

To comply, gatekeepers must give users "the right to unsubscribe from core 
platform services under similar conditions to subscription; ensure the 
interoperability of their instant messaging services' basic functionalities; 
allow app developers fair access to the supplementary functionalities of 
smartphones (e.g. NFC chip); give sellers access to their marketing or 
advertising performance data on the platform; [and] inform the European 
Commission of their acquisitions and mergers," the European Council said.

For important software such as web browsers, gatekeepers must "not require this 
software by default upon installation of the operating system."

They also won't be allowed to "rank their own products or services higher than 
those of others (self-preferencing); reuse private data collected during a 
service for the purposes of another service; establish unfair conditions for 
business users; pre-install certain software applications; [or] require app 
developers to use certain services (e.g. payment systems or identity providers) 
in order to be listed in app stores," the press release said.

Apple and Google object

Apple told Reuters and other news organizations that it is "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."

Google said, "While we support many of the DMA's ambitions around consumer 
choice and interoperability, we're worried that some of these rules could 
reduce innovation and the choice available to Europeans.

We'll now take some time to study the final text, talk with the regulator, and 
work out what we need to do to comply."

A tech-industry lobbying group, the Chamber of Progress, said, "The impact of 
the bill remains squarely focused on American tech companies, and the Biden 
Administration has warned that the DMA could expose the US tech sector to 
increased IP and cybersecurity threats."


JON BRODKIN is Ars Technica's senior IT reporter, covering the FCC and 
broadband, telecommunications, tech policy, and more. EMAIL 
[email protected] // TWITTER @JBrodkin

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