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EU turning up the heat in big tech fight

IF 2024 already looks like an annus horribilis for big tech in the European Union, the months ahead could prove a winter of discontent as the bloc wields a fortified new legal armoury to bring online titans to heel.

Since August last year, the world's biggest digital platforms have faced the toughest ever tech regulations in the European Union, which shows no sign of slowing down in enforcing them.

Brussels scored its first major victory after forcing TikTok to permanently remove an "addictive" feature from a spinoff app in Europe in August, a year after content moderation rules under the bloc's Digital Services Act (DSA) started to apply.

That followed a seven-day period earlier in the summer in which Brussels issued back-to-back decisions targeting Apple, Meta and Microsoft. And more is to come before this year is over, say officials.

The EU's moves are all thanks to two laws, the DSA, which forces companies to police online content, and its sister competition law, the Digital Markets Act (DMA), which gives big tech a list of what they can and can't do in business.

Since the DMA curbs kicked in in March, the EU has pressured Apple to back down in a spat with Fortnite maker Epic over a gaming app store.

EU lawmaker Stephanie Yon-Courtin, who focuses on digital issues, said: "The European Commission is doing the job.

"It is implementing the DMA with limited resources and within a short timeframe compared with lengthy competition cases."

Jan Penfrat, senior policy adviser at online rights group EDRi, says changes are already visible, the DSA giving users the "right to complain" when content is removed or accounts are suspended, or the DMA allowing them to select browsers and search engines via choice screens.

He said EDRi and other groups in July compiled a list of areas where Apple failed to follow the DMA.

Apple is the biggest thorn in the EU's side as the DMA's chief critic, claiming it puts users'security at risk. The iPhone maker became the first company in June to face formal accusations of breaking the DMA's rules and faces heavy fines unless it addresses the charges.

Apple announced changes to the App Store on Aug 8 to comply with the DMA.

The EU is now evaluating Apple's plans. One thing is clear: Brussels is ready for a fight.

Another high-profile test of the bloc's new powers will be X, with regulators to decide as early as September whether the former Twitter should be made to comply with the DMA.

The DSA's rules on curbing disinformation and hate speech have sparked a spectacular clash between X's billionaire owner Elon Musk and the bloc's digital chief Thierry Breton, with the spectre of fines or an outright EU ban on the site if violations persist.

EU competition chief Margrethe Vestager has said that Brussels is going at "full speed".

The goal: to cut short the length of competition investigations, which lasted years, to a maximum of 12 months under the DMA.

But companies can challenge fines or decisions in the EU courts, which could mean years of subsequent legal battles, lawyers say.

Undeterred, Brussels is turning up the heat.

In addition to potential new DMA curbs on X, the EU could soon add Telegram to its list of "very large" platforms, such as WhatsApp, that face the DSA's strictest rules.

Brussels wants no corner of the digital sphere left untouched.

That includes the critical area of artificial intelligence, with the EU looking into deals between giants and generative AI developers, such as Microsoft and its US$13-billion tie-up with ChatGPT maker OpenAI.


The writer is from AFP

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