EU Reviewing Major Tech Companies Over Ecosystem Practices

Published On Sat Jun 29 2024
EU Reviewing Major Tech Companies Over Ecosystem Practices

Major tech companies including Microsoft, OpenAI, Google and more under EU review

Major tech companies, most of which are based in the US, are under a review by the EU due to their practices that make consumers depend on certain ecosystems and prevent them from switching services.

US-based tech majors such as Microsoft, OpenAI, Google, Facebook, South Korea's Samsung, and Chinese social media firm TikTok are in the radar of the EU, according to an official.

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EU Commissioner for Competition's Address

"A major risk we see is big tech players leveraging their market power across different markets within their ecosystem," EU Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager said Friday during her address at the European Commission workshop on Competition in Virtual Worlds and Generative AI in Brussels.

"Strong competition enforcement is always needed at times of big industrial and tech changes. It is then that markets can tip, that monopolies can be formed, and that innovation can be snuffed out. When competition enforcement steps in, it allows different business models and new ideas to develop. So we must get ready," she added.

Concerns about AI and Metaverse

Vestager highlighted that artificial intelligence (AI) and metaverse are developing at "breakneck speed," and the EU "cannot just sit back and see how things pan out."

Joaquin Almunia, EU Commissioner for Competition - Talking Europe

"Concentration is especially high at the top of the value chain, where large foundation models are trained to be used in various applications. These models need vast amounts of data, computing power, cloud infrastructure, and talent, which only a few players have," she added.

Actions Taken by the EU

The European Commission has been gathering specific information on the competition dynamics in the AI industry for several months, by opening calls for contributions and by sending requests for information to several companies in the industry.

In March, the EU sent formal information requests under its antitrust rules to several big tech players, including Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and TikTok.

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After reviewing their replies, it sent a follow-up request for information on the agreement between Microsoft and OpenAI, to understand whether certain exclusivity clauses could have a negative effect on competitors.

Vestager also mentioned that the EU has sent requests for information to better understand the effects of Google's arrangement with Samsung to pre-install its small model Gemini Nano on certain Samsung devices.

Joaquin Almunia, EU Commissioner for Competition - Talking Europe

Concerns about Apple

The European Commission this week said Apple is breaching its Digital Markets Act with its App Store rules that prevent developers from freely steering consumers to alternative channels for offers and content.