Dayton Daily News

Google’s $2.1B plan to buy Fitbit drawing scrutiny

- By Kelvin Chan

European Union regulators opened an in-depth investigat­ion Tuesday into Google’s plan to buy fitness tracking device maker Fitbit.

The EU’s executive commission said it was concerned the deal would entrench the U.S. tech giant’s position in the online ad market by “increasing the already vast amount of data” the company uses to personaliz­e ads.

“Our investigat­ion aims to ensure that control by Google over data collected through wearable devices as a result of the transactio­n does not distort competitio­n,” said European Commission Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager, who also is the EU’s competitio­n commission­er.

Google agreed to buy Fitbit in November for $2.1 billion. Privacy, social justice and consumer groups have called on authoritie­s to block the deal, citing privacy and antitrust concerns.

The EU said the deal could expand Google’s “data advantage” and therefore raise barriers for rivals to match Google’s online advertisin­g services.

“This deal is about devices, not data,” said Rick Osterloh, Google’s senior vice president for devices and services. “We’ve been clear from the beginning that we will not use Fitbit health and wellness data for Google ads,” he wrote in a blog post.

The investigat­ion adds more scrutiny of the transactio­n, which Australia’s competitio­n watchdog is also examining. And it underscore­s the lead role EU authoritie­s have taken in global efforts to regulate the big technology companies.

Vestager has been at the forefront of the movement to rein in the likes of Google and its Silicon Valley rivals. During her first fiveyear term as competitio­n commission­er, she slapped Google with nearly $10 billion in penalties for multiple antitrust cases involving its Android operating system, advertisin­g business and shopping service.

Critics say big fines failed to change how tech giants behave and have called on regulators to take tougher action.

The EU commission has until Dec. 9 to decide on whether to block or approve the deal.

In an effort to allay the apprehensi­on, Google offered to put all informatio­n collected from wearable devices into a virtual data silo. But the overture wasn’t enough to satisfy the European Commission, which said the proposal wouldn’t cover all the data Google could access as a result of the acquisitio­n.

The regulators will also look into how Europe’s digital healthcare sector would be affected by the Google acquisitio­n, as well as whether the purchase would give the company the ability and incentive to make it harder for wearable devices developed by rivals to work with Android.

Google may suggest more concession­s to get the purchase cleared, but it’s hard to see what else the company could do to offset its formidable market power, said Agustin Reyna, director of economic and legal affairs at European consumer group BEUC, one of 20 organizati­ons that jointly warned about the dangers of the Fitbit deal.

“Here, we’re talking about Google acquiring a new source of data which no other competitor has access to,” he said.

Google’s plan to acquire Fitbit marked a bold plunge into health and fitness technology for the search behemoth as it tries to become a force in consumer hardware.

 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH / AP ?? European Union regulators said Tuesday they’re investigat­ing Google’s plan to buy fitness tracker Fitbit.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH / AP European Union regulators said Tuesday they’re investigat­ing Google’s plan to buy fitness tracker Fitbit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States