Thursday, March 27, 2025

DMA@1: Looking Back and Ahead

CERRE Report here

Discussion here.

 

 My Bluesky Thread, for memory.


Keynote speaker’s message: we should stick to our DMA guns, despite the Commission’s tricky dual role. And this is what we're seeing (me: 🤞)

1️⃣ DMA complaint received by the Belgian CA and forwarded to the Commission.

NCAs staff seconded to contributing to DMA enforcement - how many are they? Belgium sent one.

Great stressing the complementary role of competition law to the DMA. Can't wait for those GenAI, cloud related cases...

Nobody from the DMA Team - not too pleased with the (barely passing) report card? I disagree, of course, but for the record CERRE didn't ask me 🙂

Alex de Streel just said that the DMA Team was invited but too busy at the moment.

DuckDuckGo more of a gatekeeper challenger than a "business user" if I may...

Box ticking type of engagement with Google, not really multilateral consultation, says DuckDuckGo (whybutwhy?)

Evaluation of the DMA: how to assess/maximize the impact on innovation, proposes DuckDuckGo [writing a paper on a dynamic, evolutionary assessment of the DMA - agree with nuances]

Apple on the panel, striking a notably assertive tone, claiming “hundreds of engineers” are working on compliance, and yet the Commission, they suggest, still doesn’t get it.

[Both Apple and DuckDuckGo are CERRE's members, as well as telecom regulators, did anyone mention it?]

Forward looking approach mentioned by Chiara, looking forward to it!

Fantastic, and the audience didn't even laugh: Apple as the "happy recipient" of the two specification decisions complained that it was too quick 😂

So: put it on the agenda of the next High Level Group - issues in the cloud sector, as will be explained by BEREC/Arcep

So, we heard that Apple was invited to the High Level Group - more transparency would be much appreciated

DMA Team from the audience: 1) Art. 7 KPIs are the goal; 2) hearing that clarity via specification decisions came too fast was, well, "interesting"

Simonetta Vezzoso
‪@wavesblog.bsky.social‬
Unintended consequences..."Security, privacy" mentions Axel - really? Haven't seen any yet TBH
March 27, 2025 at 4:14 PM

Waiting for the Meta Decision, which is going to improve privacy!

"Epic is a beneficiary of the DMA" - but 4 BIG Fs: - Fees; - Friction (15/12 steps, really?); - Fake security reasons; - Fear of retaliation.

CCIA: - DMA might change, uncertainty for businesses! - Fear of political intervention, bc regulators are understaffed! I'm going to stop there, the level of astroturfing is almost unprecedented.

[Clearly, Qualcomm and Microsoft didn't want to say anything.] Dutch CA: great work so far, do we see more innovation? Too early to say...

Also the Dutch CA: competition authorities can actually do a lot, need for coordination of investigative powers. And, more possibility of involvement by civil society!

[Wondering whether if Microsoft at some point will mention interoperability by design ☺️- very vague, subliminal messages so far]

CCIA: look at compliance costs, also by business users, consumers are worse-off - STOP.

Dutch CA, DMA assessment: Process, output, ok; outcome - increased innovation - we can't measure it yet. Yep, but if we're serious about innovation, much to say already (paper coming).

Specifics: totally agree with Epic. Data and its assessment (also with civil society's involvement, he said) is key!

Wholesale assault on the First Amendment by the Trump administration

 M.A.Franks, here

Judge Stein dismisses some, but not all claims v. OpenAI and Microsoft in the newspapers cases

 ChatGPT is eating the world, here

Friday, January 31, 2025

LOOKING AHEAD AT PRIVATE ENFORCEMENT OF THE DMA AND WHY THE DB STATION JUDGMENT DOES NOT HINDER STANDALONE DAMAGES CLAIMS

 Platform Law Blog, here

Apple asks court to halt Google search monopoly case

 The Verge, here.

A Personal Thank You to Lina Khan-From the Other Side of the Atlantic

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 😁
ROME, ITALY - When I started studying antitrust law at university, I thought it was about fairness, discovery processes, and the democracy of opportunities. What I actually found was more of an economic comedy, scripted by the Chicago School, with the help of crafty and unscrupulous lawyers, where monopolies were presented as harmless, even benevolent giants. For anyone with common sense, it was obviously a farce-or worse.
Then you and a few others showed up, Lina. You quietly pointed out the absurdity and called the game for what it was: unchecked economic power stifles innovation, pushes up prices, exploits workers, and steadily erodes democracy.
You fought hard, achieved a lot, and didn't get nearly enough time. Maybe it was already too late.
Thank you, Lina. You made antitrust law, for a brief period (?), exciting again-reviving it from its cursed sleep. And that, in itself, is nothing short of miraculous.

From the Archives:"Are Tech Giants too big for America's Democracy?" Yes!

 2017 OMI Panel, video here.

A Report from the Court Room Part II: Apple’s paramount significance for competition across markets on trial

 SCIDA Project, here.

Beyond geopolitics: Agency and modularity in mobile telecommunications in Kazakhstan

 O. Baldakova, E. Oreglia, here.

Breaking up the Tech-Giants, for Real? [Or Academic Nirvana ;-)?]

 A. D'Amico, A. Gerbrandy, here. 

International AI Safety Report

 AI Action Summit, here.

DeepSeek and Trump 2.0: Can Europe Keep Up in AI?

 AI Now, here.

European Union: the Commission’s evolving approach to digital mergers

 GCR, here.

CHARTING THE DIGITAL AND TECHNOLOGICAL FUTURE OF EUROPE: WHAT PRIORITIES FOR THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION IN 2024-2029?

 EUI, here.

Monday, January 20, 2025

Une grande soirée festive pour fêter l’entrée dans une nouvelle ère numérique

 HelloQuitteX, ici.

Influence by design

P. Bouchaud, A. Lesplingart, A. Atanasova, ici.

NEUN WETTBEWERBSPOLITISCHE EMPFEHLUNGEN ZUR BUNDESTAGSWAHL

 Monopolkommission, hier.

From principles to practice: The case for coordinated international LLMs supervision

 O. Borgogno, A. Perrazzelli, here.

“Is the “Exclusionary Effects” Filter set out under the Draft Guidelines on Article 102 TFEU an empty one?”

 A. Lamadrid, here.

Amazon AI deal leaves ‘zombie’ start-up in its wake, whistleblower says

WP, here.

Protecting Democracy in the Digital Era: What Can Competition Law Contribute?

 V. Robertson, here.

CODE and the UK Digital Agenda

 Here (Meta, Google etc. as members).

Consultation publique sur les modalités d’introduction d’un système de contrôle des concentrations susceptibles de porter atteinte à la concurrence et ne franchissant pas les seuils de notification en vigueur

 Adlc, ici.

Clara Chappaz, ministre chargée de l'Intelligence Artificielle et du numérique

 FranceInter, ici (30:52).

FTC Surveillance Pricing Study Indicates Wide Range of Personal Data Used to Set Individualized Consumer Prices

 FTC, here.

Federal Trade Commission Accomplishments under Lina Khan

 FTC, here.

Technology is at an Inflection Point. The FTC is on the Front Lines.

 FTC, here.

FTC Issues Staff Report on AI Partnerships & Investments Study

 FTC, here.

Thursday, January 09, 2025

Free the Market: How We Can Save Capitalism from the Capitalists

 M. Lemley, here.

Cloud Policy: A History of Regulating Pipelines, Platforms, and Data

 J. Holt, here

Social Media: Content Dissemination and Moderation Practices

 CRS, here.

Navigating the new UK antitrust landscape 🍿

 White & Case, here.

Mapping Generative AI rules and liability scenarios in the AI Act, and in the proposed EU liability rules for AI liability

 T. Rodriguez, here.

Navigating China’s regulatory approach to generative artificial intelligence and large language models

 M. Zou, L. Zhang, here.

Brussels will be watching whether Musk breaks EU law in far-right livestream

 Politico.eu, here.

Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter Delivers Farewell Address

 DOJ, here.

Bias baked in: How Big Tech sets its own AI standards

 CEO, here.

Lina Khan in conversation with Bill Baer

 Video here .

FTC Chair Khan hopes Amazon, Facebook won’t get ‘sweetheart deal’ from Trump in antitrust cases

 L. Khan's exit interview, CNBC, here

"What the reules are for speech online is an enormously important question, and a world and an economy in which those rules are being set by a single company - or even a single executive - is deeply at odds with why we have the antitrust laws and the antimonopoly laws. This is an economy that has thrived when we have fierce competition and I heard a lot of concerns, including on both sides of the aisle, about what happens when you concentrate control and have gatekeepers over who gets heard and who gets heard and who gets to speak...I think we should have an economy where the decisions of a single company or a single executive aren't having extrordinary impact on speech online...It will be intererint to see what happens. We have of course litigation ongoing, there's going to be a trial starting this spring,  FTC v. Facebook , alleging that their prior acquisition were illegal."

Amicus Machine: Commedia dell'arte gone wrong

 Google's AI nails it in this NotebookLM podcast .

Amicus brief here


Tuesday, October 29, 2024

X vs. Brazil: What Questions Remain After the Turmoil?

 InternetLab, here.

Microsoft/Inflection: CMA decision

 CMA, here.

Pay or okay under the DMA and much more by other Speakers (even DMA "compliance by design")

Centre for a Digital Society, Video here.  

These are my very rough talking points on pay or okay in full length (more than I actually had the chance to say)

As we all know, contestability is one of the DMA’s two primary objectives, the other being fairness. The recitals that specifically refer to the obligations under Article 5(2) expressly address the goal of contestability. The General Court in its recent decision Bytedance ruling dismissing ByteDance’s action seeking the annulment of the European Commission’s designation decision of its TikTok service defines the objective of ensuring the contestability of markets as the ability of undertakings to effectively overcome barriers to entry and expansion and challenge the gatekeeper on the merits of their products and services. Importantly the Court also pointed out that the purpose of the DMA is to ensure the contestability of the position of gatekeepers not only by other gatekeepers but also, or even especially, by other operators which are not gatekeepers for a given CPS. contestability’ relates above all to the ability of undertakings which are not gatekeepers for a given CPS to challenge those gatekeepers on the basis of the merits of their products and services. What this provision aims to address are the advantages in terms of data accumulation, thereby raising barriers to entry, from which gatekeepers benefit. Thus, it aims to ensure that gatekeepers do not unfairly undermine the contestability of core platform services. 

Meta presented the pay or okay model as its compliance solution with Article 5(2) to the Commission. The issue before us is not so much whether the solution for compliance with Article 5(2) abstractly conforms to the objective of ensuring contestability, this is not how the DMA is supposed to work, but whether it is directly compliant with the obligations set forth in Article 5(2). Therefore, we must look to the letter and spirit of the obligation. The pay or consent model presents users with a binary choice. Either users subscribe for a monthly fee to an ads-free version of these social networks or to a free-of charge access to a version of these social networks with personalised ad. Users who do not consent if they want to continue using the service have to pay a monthly fee. 

This is clearly in breach of the DMA In terms of legislative history of the DMA it should be remembered that the elements laying down the requirements for consent under the DMA reveal that the legislators were very well aware of the shortcomings surrounding consent. As a matter of fact, the rapporteur proposed to remove the option of consent, arguing that informed consent is “virtually unachievable” and instead opt for an outright prohibition. Recital 36 emphasizes the necessity for gatekeepers to enable end users to freely choose to opt-in to data processing by offering a less personalized but equivalent alternative. This is the condition specified by the DMA to ensure that the user is able to choose freely. 

In order to be compliant what should Meta do then? First, users who do not consent should have access to a less personalized service. It should be noted that in this case, "less personalized" refers to the personalization of advertising – meaning a service that uses less data. Second, users who do not consent should have access to those social networking services are free. Otherwise this wouldn’t be equivalent to Meta’s social networking services which are also free. A paid subscription is not a valid equivalent to free access. Commission officials noted that Meta could still offer a subscription option, but any paid choice would need to be an additional offer (i.e. a third choice) on top of a free equivalent that does not demand users consent to being tracked. 

I think the DMA is clear and that Meta's pay or okay is in breach of the letter of the DMA. I find it quite surprising that this was proposed as a compliance solution, and the Commission must conclude the proceedings by reaching an infringement decision. Therefore, if users do not have access to a less personalized but equivalent alternative, there isn't a true choice, and it cannot be said that users are able to freely choose. The pay or okay model is thus non-compliant because it does not allow users to exercise their right to freely consent to the combination of their personal data. Consequently, citizens aren't able to take control of their data. 

Obviously, Meta claims that it is compliant with the DMA. They also argue that their pay or okay model was legitimized by the Court of Justice in the Meta ruling. This preliminary ruling, as I believe we all know here, stems from the German Facebook saga, which the Bundeskartellamt has recently managed to conclude. The judges stated in that ruling that a paid version of a service may be offered as an alternative to tracking ads, provided that the fee is appropriate and only if necessary - le cas écheant  (cumulative conditions). In the DMA context, the gatekeeper would therefore have to argue why a fee falls into "le cas échéant."  But is that fee truly really meets le cas échéant? In reality, Meta could offer an alternative service with ads that do not rely on any personal data for targeting — such as contextual advertising. Meta has never explained why it has not offered users a free, contextual ads option. 

Is the pay or consent model a complex case under the DMA that requires numerous panels? I would not say so, and the Commission is right to proceed swiftly to an infringement decision. This obligation is clear enough to be self-executing.

 This does not mean dealing a fatal blow to targeted advertising. No, because those users who prefer it can choose it, but those who do not want it can also make a choice. It's not that a paid option cannot be offered, but there must also be an equivalent and free option available. At this point, this offering could be supported in another way, such as through contextual advertising. Users who are also allergic to contextual advertising can choose to pay for an ad-free option. A model like the pay or okay, which is likely in breach of data protection laws, consumer protection laws, and the DMA, and could potentially also be an abuse of a dominant position, cannot be tolerated. Additionally, the Commission has issued a Request for Information (RFI) under the DSA, asking Meta to provide additional information on the measures it has taken to comply with its obligations concerning Facebook and Instagram's advertising practices, recommender systems, and risk assessments related to the introduction of that subscription option. 

Some final considerations.

The EU legislator, through the DMA, has taken seriously the need to ensure that consent is freely expressed, even when dealing with a gatekeeper, and has provided gatekeepers with the opportunity to adapt. In some ways, the Court of Justice's ruling in Meta reflects some concepts of the DMA. Of course, the reference to an appropriate payment if necessary ("le cas échéant") must be interpreted restrictively because it involves a fundamental right whose exercise should not become a privilege for the few. 

Here, data protection, consumer protection, and the DMA are aligned, which is also a sign that various enforcers can in some cases cooperate well with each other. This pay or ok model must be abandoned, and the sooner an enforcer achieves this ultimate goal, the better. The EDPB expansively interprets the GDPR to introduce an additional requirement, namely the requirement to provide a “free alternative without behavioural advertising”. This would in effect be a quasi-mandatory condition for obtaining valid consent. Meta will therefore need to truly comply and adopt a different solution. The alternatives must be compliant not only with the DMA but also with the GDPR and consumer protection laws, of course. 

The Meta ruling was significant, but the DMA had already anticipated many of the points made by the judges, including the topic of forward-looking collaboration among enforcers. A prime example of this is the High Level Group. From the outside, it already appears to be a very important institution in the DMA regulatory framework. From the perspective of civil society, we would appreciate greater transparency of its workings and, perhaps exceptionally, an invitation to participate 

The German Facebook saga has recently concluded. Long live Article 5(2) DMA? 

Certainly, but also long live Section 19(a) of the GWB. It would be better if other national authorities adopted similar provisions to alleviate the burden on Article 102 concerning the abuse of a dominant position. We'll see if the announced Draft Guidelines can somehow make this article more manageable, but at the moment, there may be many reasons to doubt it. In concluding the Facebook proceeding, the Bundeskartellamt clearly stated that not taking enforcement action based on its February 2019 decision does not imply Meta's behavior is fully compliant with obligations under competition, data protection, consumer protection laws, and the DMA. It suggested that other authorities could use their powers to further improve Meta's service offerings, turning the situation into a relay where the Bundeskartellamt's conclusion serves as a launch point for further enforcement by others. This indicates that improvements might also come from applying GDPR principles such as data minimization. 

Final reflection: it’s not about praising the DMA as such, but this specific provision is well-crafted and highly targeted. It anticipated developments that we later saw concerning the GDPR and complements consumer protection effectively. Other provisions may be less so. The synergy with Section 19a of the GWB is particularly promising, and it's unfortunate that authorities in other Member States are not equipped with similar measures in their own legislations.

Monday, October 28, 2024

Death by a thousand roundtables

 Chalmermagne, here.

The Reform of Article 102 TFEU: Evolution or Revolution?

 ICF, recordings here.

Apple Intelligence is available today on iPhone, iPad, and Mac

 Apple, here.

US weighs Google break-up in landmark antitrust case

 FT, here (and here).

And here.

Call for tenders: Study into how emerging technologies may impact digital market regulation

 Tender, here.

US talk on Google breakup gives EU political cover to get tough

 Politico.eu, here.

Competition Law in South Asia

 A. Darr, here.

The Other Sherman’s March

 R. John, here.

Cofece propone cambios en el sector fintech para que los mexicanos tengan acceso a mejores servicios financieros

 Aquì.

Media and Digital Platforms Market Inquiry

 South African Competition Authority, here.

Google’s $2 Billion Anthropic Investment Faces U.K. Antitrust Scrutiny

 WSJ, here.

Antitrust has come into fashion

 Here.

What happens in the Google ad tech antitrust trial now that testimony is done?

 Digiday, here.

EU AI Act: Brussels effect(s) or a race to the bottom?

 G. Greenleaf, here.

The antitrust trial of the United States v. Google, LLC

Usvgoogleads, here.

PLATAFORMAS DIGITAIS NO BRASIL: FUNDAMENTOS ECONÔMICOS, DINÂMICAS DE MERCADO E PROMOÇÃO DE CONCORRÊNCIA

 Secretaria de Reformas Econômicas do Ministério da Fazenda, aqui

Plataformas Digitais no Brasil: Fundamentos econômicos, dinâmicas de mercado e promoção da concorrência

Case summary of 10 October 2024: Facebook; Implementation of the Bundeskartellamt’s decision of 6 February 2019 (Abusive business terms due to inappropriate data processing)

 Bundeskartellamt, here.

Competition and Artificial Intelligence

 Report to the California Law Review Commission Antitrust Law: Study B-750, here.

The Search Monopoly

 Organized Money, here.

Reshaping EU Merger Control: from Harm Detection to Harm Control

 S. Marco Colino, K. Lam Macy Chung, here.

The Push to Fire Lina Khan Reveals a Serious Problem in Silicon Valley

 

Breaking Up Google

 C. Rikap, here.

Protecting competition in a changing world - public workshop

 EC, here.

Reid Hoffman on......Lina Khan

 On with Kara Swisher, here.

Natural monopolies and oligopolies have emerged in the asset management industry

 R. Chopra, here.

Innovation Misunderstood

 M. Stucke, A. Ezrachi, here.

Examining the impact of artificial intelligence on market competition and consumers

 Hungarian Competition Authority, here.

Commission fines České dráhy and Österreichische Bundesbahnen €48.7 million over collusion to exclude common competitor

 Here.

Justice Department and Department of Transportation Launch Broad Public Inquiry into the State of Competition in Air Travel

 Here.

Memorandum on Advancing the United States’ Leadership in Artificial Intelligence

 White House, here.

The next big arenas of competition

 McKinsey Global Institute, here.

DCI Annual Conference 2024

 Day 1, Video here;

Day 2, Video here.

Starting again (a bit) - lost and unsure without it myself ;-)