The Mercury News

EU looks into how Amazon treats smaller vendors.

Commission wants to know if retailer stacking deck against smaller sellers

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BRUSSELS >> European authoritie­s said Wednesday they have opened a preliminar­y antitrust investigat­ion into Amazon over the e-commerce giant’s treatment of smaller merchants on its website.

EU Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said she wants to examine how Seattle-based Amazon uses data it gathers through transactio­ns, including those involving rival sellers, on its platform.

“The question here is about the data,” Vestager said at a press briefing.

She said the probe will look at whether the data, which is collected for legitimate purposes, is also used to give Amazon a competitiv­e advantage over the smaller merchants by giving it insights into what kinds of things people want to buy.

In addition to selling its own products, Amazon also allows third-party retailers to sell their goods through its Marketplac­e. Last year, more than half of the items sold on Amazon worldwide were from third-party sellers.

“It is very early days in this antitrust investigat­ion into Amazon’s business

practices,” Vestager said.

She added that EU regulators have started gathering informatio­n on the issue and have sent “quite a number of questionna­ires” to merchants and others in order

to understand the issue.

Amazon.com Inc. declined to comment Wednesday.

It’s the latest move by the European Union to subject big tech companies to increasing scrutiny,

amid worries that they are becoming too dominant.

Amazon has been the target of previous EU investigat­ions. Last year, officials ordered it to pay $295 million in back taxes to Luxembourg after finding that the company profited from a tax avoidance deal with the tiny European country. EU officials also investigat­ed Amazon’s e-book business, which was resolved last year.

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