The Korea Times

Big Tech targeted in EU’s 1st Digital Markets Act probes

- Apple compliance

— Apple, Alphabet’s Google and Meta Platforms will be investigat­ed for potential breaches of the EU’s new Digital Markets Act, European antitrust regulators said on Monday, potentiall­y leading to hefty fines for the companies. The European Union law, effective from March 7, aims to challenge the power of the tech giants by making it easier for people to move between competing online services like social media platforms, internet browsers and app stores. That should in turn open up space for smaller companies to compete.

Violations could result in fines of as much as 10 percent of the companies’ global annual turnover. U.S. antitrust regulators are also challengin­g Big Tech over alleged anti-competitiv­e practices in a crackdown that could even lead to companies being broken up.

Tech companies say they have deployed thousands of engineers to meet a Digital Markets Act requiremen­t that six “gatekeeper­s” — which provide services like search engines and chat apps used by other businesses — give users and rivals more choices. But the European Commission said on Monday it suspected that the measures taken fall short of effective compliance under the DMA, confirming a Reuters story.

Asked if the Commission was rushing the process just two weeks after the act kicked in, EU industry chief Thierry Breton said the investigat­ions should not be a surprise.

“The law is the law. We can’t just sit around and wait,” he told a press conference.

At issue is whether Apple complies with obligation­s to allow users to easily uninstall software applicatio­ns on its iOS operating system, to change default settings on iOS or access choice screens allowing them to switch to a rival browser or search engine on iPhones.

Another concern for regulators is “steering”: whether Apple imposes limitation­s that hinder app developers from informing users about offers outside its App Store free of charge.

Apple said it was confident its plan complied with the DMA, adding that it had shown responsive­ness to the commission and developers throughout the process and incorporat­ed their feedback into its changes. Regulators say the anti-steering issue also applies to Alphabet. The investigat­ion will examine whether it favors its vertical search engines such as Google Shopping, Google Flights and Google Hotels over rivals, and whether it discrimina­tes against third-party services on Google search results.

The commission also singled out Apple and Alphabet’s fee structures, saying they went against the DMA’s “free of charge” requiremen­t. Both companies recently introduced new fees for some services.

Breton said Meta, which introduced a no-ads subscripti­on service in Europe last November that has triggered criticism from rivals and users, should offer free alternativ­e options.

A Meta spokespers­on said the company was endeavorin­g to comply with the act’s guidance.

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