U.S Tech Giants Face Tough New Rules Under EU

Tech companies, Google, Amazon, Apple, Meta, and Microsoft may have to change their core business practices in Europe as EU countries and EU lawmakers on Thursday clinched a deal on landmark rules to curb their powers.

France, which currently holds the rotating EU presidency, said in a tweet that there was a provisional agreement after eight hours of talks.

EU industry Chief Thierry Breton said in a post on social media, that the deal would ensure fair and open digital markets.

EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager, who proposed the rules just over a year ago, said, “What we want is simple: fair markets also in digital. Large gatekeeper platforms have prevented businesses and consumers from the benefit of competitive digital markets,”

EU lawmaker Andreas Schwab, who had steered the debate in the European Parliament, also chimed in saying”This means that the time of long antitrust cases, during which the authorities were lagging behind the big tech companies, is over,”

The Digital Markets Act (DMA) sets out rules for online gatekeepers – companies that control data and platform access.

It will cover gatekeepers in online intermediation services, social networks, search engines, operating systems, online advertising services, cloud computing, video-sharing services, web browsers, and virtual assistants.

Under the DMA, the tech giants will have to make their messaging services interoperable and provide business users access to their data. Business users would be able to promote competing products and services on a platform and reach deals with customers off the platforms.

The rules prohibit the companies from favoring their own services over rivals’ or preventing users from removing pre-installed software or apps.

The DMA will apply to companies with a market capitalization of 75 billion euros, 7.5 billion euros in annual turnover, and at least 45 million monthly users.

Companies will face hefty fines up to 10% of their annual global turnover for breaching the rules and as much as 20% for repeat offenses.

Apple used the opportunity to reiterate its worries having lobbied intensively against the DMA.

“We remain concerned that some provisions of the DMA will create unnecessary privacy and security vulnerabilities for our users while others will prohibit us from charging for intellectual property in which we invest a great deal,” it said in a statement.

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