Los Angeles Times

EU to scrutinize Amazon’s data collection from sellers

- By Natalia Drozdiak and David McLaughlin Drozdiak and McLaughlin write for Bloomberg.

The European Union’s antitrust cop has taken an aggressive lead in regulating U.S. tech giants in recent years. But with its latest query into Amazon.com Inc., the EU is echoing the views of a 29-year-old legal scholar across the Atlantic.

EU Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said Wednesday that her department had begun a preliminar­y investigat­ion into whether data that the e-commerce giant collects from retailers that sell on its site give Amazon an edge in marketing its own products to customers and squeezing out more sales as a result.

Vestager said the EU was looking into the issue because it came up in a broad e-commerce sector investigat­ion concluded last year, but also because “this is also what a lot of people are talking about by now, so we do the follow-up.”

And to a large degree, Lina Khan, an academic fellow at Columbia University Law School, helped shape that debate.

As a student at Yale Law School, Khan wrote a paper for the Yale Law Journal called “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox,” which argues that the current antitrust enforcemen­t framework is illequippe­d to tackle Amazon’s dominance and the potential harm it poses to competitio­n. Her work was cited by the head of the Justice Department’s antitrust division, Makan Delrahim, in a speech in April as an example of fresh thinking on digital platforms.

Khan has highlighte­d what the EU cited Wednesday as a preliminar­y concern: that Amazon can exploit informatio­n it collects about third-party sellers to better compete against them. At a news conference in Brussels, Vestager noted Amazon’s dual role as a platform for retailers to sell their goods as well as a merchant in its own right. That position makes Amazon privy to data about the customers of retailers it competes with.

“The question here is about the data” Amazon collects from smaller merchants on its site, Vestager said. “Do you then also use this data to do your own calculatio­ns, as to what is the new big thing, what is it that people want, what kind of offers do they like to receive, what makes them buy things? That has made us start a preliminar­y” investigat­ion, she said.

Khan’s ideas on Amazon fit into a broader movement, dubbed “hipster antitrust.” That movement is led by a small group of policy wonks who are encouragin­g tougher competitio­n enforcemen­t by the U.S. government and looking to return antitrust policy to its early 20th century roots — when regulators went after monopolies in railroads and oil — to take on new corporate giants, particular­ly in the tech sector.

Similar to Vestager’s concerns, Khan says Amazon’s current business structure presents a conflict of interest that stems from how it competes with the same companies that depend on its platform to reach consumers. That dynamic allows Amazon to solidify dominance and thwart competitio­n, she said.

“Amazon uses its marketplac­e as a petri dish to identify which independen­t sellers’ goods are doing well and then rolls out direct replicas,” Khan said in an interview Wednesday. That lets Amazon appropriat­e rewards from the risks that independen­t sellers take on, she added.

In a forthcomin­g paper in the Columbia Law Review, Khan argues for separating Amazon’s business of selling its own products and its business as a platform used by other retailers. Such a structural fix isn’t radical, she insists, and has been used in other industries.

“We should recover this principle for dominant tech platforms that serve as critical intermedia­ries,” she said.

The hipster antitrust movement is resonating because of the dominance of technology firms and evidence that markets are more concentrat­ed and less competitiv­e, said Maurice Stucke, a law professor at the University of Tennessee, who has written about Big Data and competitio­n policy.

“You see this evolution in thinking around how data can provide a competitiv­e advantage,” Stucke said.

While Vestager and the EU in general have long taken a more aggressive approach to regulating data and tech companies more broadly, Washington is also starting to wonder if it should take a fresh look at how it defines competitio­n and antitrust. The new chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, Joseph Simons, has said one of his key goals is to examine the online economy and whether tech giants such as Google, Facebook and Amazon are underminin­g competitio­n.

The debate surroundin­g antitrust scrutiny for Amazon has also picked up steam because the company has come under fire in recent months from President Trump, who has accused the company of crushing small businesses, violating antimonopo­ly laws, dodging taxes and taking advantage of the U.S. Postal Service.

On the opposite end of the political spectrum, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has taken aim at the e-commerce giant for underpayin­g its warehouse workers and treating them poorly.

Amazon has said Sanders has made “inaccurate and misleading accusation­s” about wages and benefits and has said the Postal Service makes money from its packages because the company does most of the processing itself.

Amazon has already been in the powerful EU antitrust regulator’s crosshairs, but has so far come out relatively unscathed.

The EU ordered the Seattle company in 2017 to repay Luxembourg 250 million euros ($294 million at the time) in allegedly unpaid taxes, a pittance compared with the 13 billion euros the regulator ordered Apple Inc. to pay. Amazon also escaped fines in a 2016 EU settlement over e-book contracts with publishers.

By contrast, search powerhouse Google has been mired in antitrust investigat­ions in Europe for almost 10 years and has been hit with fines of 4.3 billion euros.

 ?? Stephanie Leco EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? MARGRETHE VESTAGER, the European Union’s antitrust cop, announced the Amazon investigat­ion.
Stephanie Leco EPA/Shuttersto­ck MARGRETHE VESTAGER, the European Union’s antitrust cop, announced the Amazon investigat­ion.

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