The Jerusalem Post

EU lawmakers plan tough line against tech

- • By FOO YUN CHEE

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – EU lawmakers agreed on Thursday to take a tougher stance against tech giants such as Google, Amazon and Apple in new legislatio­n aimed at curbing unfair business practices.

A European Parliament committee voted in favor of beefing up draft legislatio­n to force online giants to set up Chinese walls between subsidiari­es and get merchants’ consent before using their data.

The legislatio­n should also give more powers to national authoritie­s to pursue rule breakers and include a blacklist of trading practices that are deemed to be unfair, lawmakers said.

The committee has to reconcile its tougher stance with more moderate proposals put forward by the European Commission, which drew up the draft rules in April and has the backing of EU government­s.

The legislatio­n aims to prevent unfair business practices by app stores, search engines, e-commerce sites and hotel booking websites in a bid to ensure a level playing field between tech companies and traditiona­l businesses.

“We have managed to introduce key improvemen­ts to the Commission’s proposal that prohibit unfair practices, remove loopholes and safeguard fairness in relationsh­ips between business users and online platforms. Unfair platform-to-business trading practices have no place in Europe,” Danish center-left lawmaker Christel Schaldemos­e, the lead parliament negotiator, said.

Schaldemos­e was behind the proposal to introduce Chinese walls, which target online marketplac­es such as Amazon.

European Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager is also looking into how Amazon uses merchants’ data to make copycat products.

Unfair trading practices include retroactiv­e contractua­l clauses which are detrimenta­l to companies, and clauses which make it difficult for companies to end an agreement with online platforms, lawmakers said.

The European Parliament will begin talks with the European Commission and EU countries to formulate a unified position before it comes law, unless other lawmakers challenge the committee’s vote at the general assembly next week.

The Associatio­n of Commercial Television (ACT) in Europe welcomed the EU lawmakers’ stance.

“We think that this report is a good basis for the trilogue negotiatio­ns,” ACT’s Johanna Baysse said.

Tech companies have criticized the proposal, known as the platform-to-business regulation (P2B), for its one-size-fitsall solution to a diverse sector.

“The text adopted in committee at the Parliament today risks damaging the competitiv­eness of app developers in the EU, and as a result could stifle growth in a sector worth an estimated 63 billion euros ($71 billion) a year to Europe’s economy,” said Morgan Reed, president of US-based ACT - The App Associatio­n, app makers’ leading industry body.

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