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30 July 2024
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ByteDance v. Commission

The Digital Markets Act (DMA) is a revolutionary tool to regulate EU digital markets, it complements competition law by imposing ex ante obligations on the largest digital undertakings. The General Court judgement in the ByteDance case was the first test of the limits of this expediated enforcement and resulted in a remarkable win for the Commission. The Court dismissed ByteDance’s appeal against the European Commission’s decision to designate ByteDance with its social network TikTok as gatekeeper under the DMA. Continue reading >>
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23 January 2023

Google zähmen

Das Bundeskartellamt versucht sich an der Zähmung des Datenkraken Google und zeigt, dass es trotz europäischer Regulierung weiterhin eine Vorreiterrolle im Kampf gegen die großen Digitalunternehmen einnehmen wird. Auf Grundlage des bisher kaum erprobten § 19a Abs. 2 GWB sollen Alphabet und Google Verbraucher*innen mehr Wahlmöglichkeiten bei der Einwilligung in das „Superprofiling“ geben. Damit zielt das Bundeskartellamt in das Herz des Geschäftsmodells der digitalen Giganten. Ob das gelingt, hängt maßgeblich davon ab, ob der für diesen Zweck geschaffene § 19a GWB in der Anwendung schlagkräftiger ist als das „alte“ Kartellrecht. Continue reading >>
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06 September 2021
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How to Challenge Big Tech

The European Commission's proposal for a Digital Markets Act is meant to complement EU competition law, in order to guarantee contestable digital markets. However, from a policy point of view, the current self-restriction to behavioural remedies in competition law and merger control, as well as the focus on behavioural ex ante regulation via the DMA, is at best a half-hearted and at worst a misguided way to effectively address the Big Tech challenge. We argue in favour of a competition law toolkit with extended options to use structural measures to tackle entrenched market dysfunctionalities. Continue reading >>
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02 September 2021

Why End-User Consent Cannot Keep Markets Contestable

A central source of Big Tech gatekeepers’ power is their encompassing access to individuals’ personal data. The prohibition of Article 5(a) of the proposed Digital Markets Act, therefore, is a welcome attempt to limit the private power over data held by gatekeeping platforms. However, end-user consent cannot be regarded as an adequate safeguard for keeping data-driven markets competitive. Continue reading >>
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01 September 2021

Private enforcement and the Digital Markets Act

For the Digital Markets Act to function properly – that is, to dismantle overwhelming private power – enforcement capacities of private actors should be strengthened at the outset: Competitors and customers should be integrated into the enforcement system as complainants, informants and litigants. The digital giants will not tumble because of government intervention but because of innovative competitors and stronger customers that can rely on the framework set by governments. Private power needs to be cured with private empowerment. Continue reading >>
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30 August 2021

The Scope of the DMA

The combination of the features characterising gatekeepers in the Digital Markets Act's is likely to create significant power imbalances in the market and lead to unfair practices that the proposal aims to prevent and repair. A service-based approach, over a provider-based one, as well as a functional description of core platform services would remedy this unintended consequence. Continue reading >>
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19 January 2021

Tackling Big Tech

Am 14. Januar hat der Bundestag weitreichende Änderungen des Gesetzes gegen Wettbewerbsbeschränkungen (GWB) beschlossen. Zentrale Aspekte der Novelle betreffen die Missbrauchsaufsicht des Bundeskartellamts über digitale Plattformen. Doch ob die Anpassungen tatsächlich geeignet sind, die Marktmacht der großen Plattformunternehmen und deren Verhalten im Wettbewerb wirksam zu adressieren, bleibt abzuwarten. Bis zum Inkrafttreten entsprechender Regeln auf EU-Ebene – voraussichtlich im Digital Markets Act – können mit dem deutschen Recht aber in jedem Fall wichtige Erfahrungen für die Anwendungspraxis gewonnen werden. Continue reading >>
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04 January 2021
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A first impression of regulatory powers in the Digital Services Act

The EU Commission Proposal for a Digital Services Act (DSA), released on 15 December 2020, is one of the cornerstones of the Commission’s ‘A Europe Fit for the Digital Age’ political agenda. The regulatory model proposed in the DSA is highly centralised, with the Commission putting itself forward as the sole regulator with teeth vis-à-vis Big Tech, or “very large platforms”. A choice which builds on the failings of the GDPR, but creates tensions with general requirements of independence and impartiality of regulators. Continue reading >>