Big Tech firms from Google to Meta Platforms Inc. face beefed up oversight and potential fines of as much as 10% of global sales for practices that hurt consumers, under sweeping new legislation set to be unveiled Tuesday by the UK government.
(Bloomberg) — Big Tech firms from Google to Meta Platforms Inc. face beefed up oversight and potential fines of as much as 10% of global sales for practices that hurt consumers, under sweeping new legislation set to be unveiled Tuesday by the UK government.
Under the proposals, a new Digital Markets Unit in the nation’s antitrust regulator will have powers imposing additional obligations on some of Silicon Valley’s biggest companies earmarked as having “strategic market status.” The new regime would target firms with entrenched market power in at least one digital activity and global sales above £25 billion ($31.2 billion), or UK revenue in excess of £1 billion.
“This has the potential to be a watershed moment in the way we protect consumers in the UK and the way we ensure digital markets work for the UK economy, supporting economic growth, investment and innovation,” said Sarah Cardell, the Competition and Markets Authority’s chief executive officer.
Britain first laid out potential plans to create new digital competition rules in early 2019, at the time making the country a front-runner in the global push to rein in Big Tech. The new powers come after delays to introduce the proposals last year meant the European Union was significantly ahead of the UK with its landmark Digital Markets Act. The measures mirror strengthened powers handed to German antitrust regulators to probe companies that play a “paramount significance.”
The draft Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill, which includes a range of powers for the CMA, still needs to get parliamentary approval and go through a further legislative process before it can kick-start.
Details of how the UK’s new regime will be enforced include:
- The DMU will hold senior managers at tech companies responsible for ensuring compliance with information requests.
- Firms will be able to appeal DMU decisions to the specialist competition court, the Competition Appeal Tribunal.
- Tech firms can be asked to open up their data to rival search engines or increase the transparency of apps stores or marketplace review systems.
- Tackle fake reviews and so-called subscription traps.
- Update of mergers regime to increase the thresholds to review a deal from £70 million to £100 million.
- Tougher fines for companies breaking consumer laws including as much as 10% of global revenue.
The proposals “stand a better chance of taking targeted action to boost competition in digital markets than approaches in the EU and the US,” said Neil Ross, associate director for policy at trade association techUK.
He said it’s “imperative” that the legislation “provides a clear mandate for the DMU to engage with a wide range of companies and consumers and set out clearly how the regime will operate in practice.”
(Updates with comment from techUK in last two paragraphs)
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