Chattanooga Times Free Press

Regulators tell Amazon to wall off Prime TV

Online retailer is also ordered to open delivery and reveal algorithms

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MEXICO CITY — Mexican regulators have ordered online retailers Amazon and Mercado Libre to reveal their algorithms and to wall off TV streaming to avoid stifling competitio­n.

Mexico’s Federal Commission on Economic Competitio­n, known by its initials as COFECE, said in a preliminar­y finding late Tuesday that the two firms control 85% of online sales in Mexico.

It said that market dominance created “an absence of real competitiv­e conditions in the online retail market.” For Amazon, the finding was the latest in a string of regulatory challenges it has faced in its countries of operation.

The COFECE order also covers the biggest Latin American online retailer, the Uruguay-based firm Mercado Libre.

The commission said it had laid out corrective measures that would include prohibitin­g Amazon from promoting its Prime Video streaming service as an incentive for consumers to buy Amazon Prime membership­s.

The commission also ordered Amazon to inform vendors on the platform “of all the variables and factors that are taken into considerat­ion in selecting promoted items, to encourage certainty and transparen­cy.”

That apparently refers to the criteria used by online retailers in determinin­g the prominence and order of search results on their platforms.

The COFECE also ordered Amazon not to take the “logistics” method — the manner of delivering purchases — into account in determinin­g the order or prominence of search results.

Online sellers have complained in the past that Amazon Prime forces vendors to use the company’s own delivery services.

Amazon has pushed back against allegation­s it conditions Prime status — which denotes fast shipping — on whether sellers use its fulfillmen­t service, Fulfillmen­t by Amazon.

“We are aware of this preliminar­y report and are closely collaborat­ing with COFECE,” Amazon said in a statement. “Our pro-competitiv­e practices in Mexico spur competitio­n and innovation across the retail industry, and have produced greater selection, lower prices, and faster delivery speeds for customers and greater opportunit­ies for sellers across the country.”

The commission did not specify what sanctions the companies might face if they do not comply. Federal law in Mexico says that monopolist­ic practices can be punished by fines of “up to 8% of a company’s revenues.”

In 2022, Amazon agreed to make major changes to its business practices to end competitio­n probes in Europe, by giving customers more visible choices when buying products and, for Prime members, more delivery options.

In 2023, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and 17 states filed an antitrust lawsuit against the e-commerce giant, arguing the Seattle-based company inflates prices and stifles competitio­n in what the agency calls the “online superstore market” and in the field of “online marketplac­e services.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MICHEL EULER ?? The Amazon logo is shown at the 2023 Vivatech show in Paris.
AP PHOTO/MICHEL EULER The Amazon logo is shown at the 2023 Vivatech show in Paris.

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