The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Demand corrective action to ensure fairness in transactio­ns

- (From e Yomiuri Shimbun, Nov. 25, 2022)

It is unacceptab­le for tech giants in a dominant position to impose unfavorabl­e conditions on the companies with which they do business. e government should strongly urge them to correct their problemati­c behavior.

e Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry has compiled dra documents to request two companies, Apple Inc. of the United States and Amazon Japan G.K., to improve their transactio­ns. e ministry said the documents will be o cially decided and released by the end of this year a er soliciting public opinion.

In February 2021, a new law went into force to encourage tech giants to make their transactio­ns more transparen­t. Based on this law, the ministry is required to conduct inspection­s and compile a document evaluating the e orts of tech giants once a year.

Google LLC, Rakuten Group, Inc. and Yahoo Japan Corp. are also among the companies subject to inspection­s under the law. is time, Apple and Amazon will be cited by name over problems. is will be the rst case in which improvemen­ts will be sought under the new law. It is important to take advantage of the law as a

rst step to ensure that transactio­ns are being conducted appropriat­ely.

According to the ministry, Apple raised the prices of smartphone games and other so ware in its App Store in October. At that time, Apple provided only a 15-day notice period between noti cation and implementa­tion for app providers, and many of them were forced to deal with Apple’s decision, resulting in confusion.

Amazon, in some cases, unilateral­ly suspended transactio­ns with online shopping vendors without providing adequate explanatio­ns. Some vendors have complained that their sales proceeds were withheld and received only boilerplat­e email replies to their inquiries.

e two companies must take the suggestion­s seriously and make e orts to improve.

However, there is no enforcemen­t power in the demand for correction to be issued. Some believe that there is a limit to simply relying on voluntary responses.

e European Union has enacted the “Digital Markets Act,” which has enforcemen­t power against tech giants, and prohibits them from such matters as giving preferenti­al treatment to their own services on online shopping and search sites and using data obtained from other companies to improve their own services.

Using the EU system as a reference, Japan, too, needs to deepen the debate on whether enforcemen­t power should be introduced in the regulation of tech giants.

In addition to the issues to be cited in the documents, vendors and clients are deeply dissatis ed with such matters as the high commission­s charged for app sales as well as the lack of transparen­cy in the e ectiveness and pricing of digital advertisin­g.

e Fair Trade Commission plans to investigat­e the business dealings of news distributo­rs, including Google of the United States and Yahoo. e FTC will investigat­e, for example, whether the fees paid to news organizati­ons such as newspapers and TV stations are being kept unreasonab­ly low.

e rise of tech giants must not be allowed to undermine the foundation of various news reporting and free speech.

e government needs to promote the appropriat­eness of business transactio­ns by tech giants in a wide range of elds.

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