Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex
Background
The Digital
Markets Act (DMA) proposal is stable-mate to the Digital
Services Act (DSA) proposal (discussed here)
developed as part of a suite of actions to tackle concerns about the operation
of the digital environment. If enacted,
it will form part of a complex tapestry of measures dealing with information
society and electronic communications services of one form or another – found
in to name but a few - the European
Electronic Communications Code (which covers OTT voice services); the Audiovisual
Media Services Directive (which covers video on demand potentially
including some YouTube channels for example, as well as video sharing
platforms); the P2B
Regulation; and, of course, the e-Commerce
Directive (which the DSA develops).
It will also be developed against a backdrop of increasing competition
law enforcement actions against a number of large players in the market. The EU is not the only actor taking steps and
one important question will be how compatible these various initiatives are, as
well as how effective.
Overview of the Proposal
Based on the recognition that
platforms are a key structuring element of the current digital economy, the
proposal provides for ex ante restrictions on an identified list of services,
but only when those services are provided by operators which meet certain
thresholds. The Commission has
enforcement responsibilities and powers, with similarities to those found in
the competition field.
The relevant services are those
which the Commission has identified as “core platform services” (CPS) (defined
Art. 2(2)):
a)
online intermediation services;
b)
online search engines;
c)
online social networking services;
d)
videosharing platform services;
e)
number-independent interpersonal communication
services;
f)
operating systems;
g)
cloud computing services; and
h)
advertising services provided by an operator
which provides any of the services in (a)-(g).
While some of these terms are
defined in other instruments (eg ‘information society service’, ‘online search
engine’ and ‘video sharing platform service’, included no doubt to try to
ensure coherence across the digital regulatory space, some are novel (eg
‘online social networking service’ and ‘software application stores’). It remains to be seen how clear these
definitions are.
The service operators who will be
caught by the rules in this regulation are those designated as a “gatekeeper”
according to Article 3. Article 3(1) contains a three stage test:
-
the existence of a significant impact on the
internal market;
-
the operation of a CPS “which serves as an
important gateway for business users to reach end users”; and
-
an entrenched and durable position in its
operations.
These are assessed by
quantitative criteria (based on turnover or market value, and user reach),
producing a rebuttable presumption about the status of the operator, and
refined by reference to qualitative criteria.
It is initially for the company itself to make this assessment and to
notify the Commission.
Article 5 lists the obligations
for gatekeepers and Article 6 contains a list of further actions that may be
specified in respect of a gatekeeper. The obligations include positive
obligations and prohibitions, essentially behaviours identified from previous
competition investigations and against which competition rules seem
insufficiently effective. These rules have been set down in some detail though
the proposal envisages that the Commission may update the list of prohibited
practices in the light of enforcement experience. This is important as
otherwise closely specified rules could be overly rigid and not deal with
developments in the market or practice. This, then, could introduce some
element of future proofing. The
Regulation also provides for the possibility of exceptions, including exemption
for overriding reasons of public interest (public morality, public health and
public security).
Prohibited
Practices
-
refrain from combining personal data sourced
from these core platform services with personal data from any other services
offered by the gatekeeper or with personal data from third-party services, and
from signing in end
users to other
services of the gatekeeper in order to combine personal
data (this would catch, for example, the situation where logging into Gmail
leads to you being logged into YouTube – this has come up in investigations
into Facebook
also) (Art5(a));
-
refrain from preventing or restricting business users
from raising issues with any relevant public authority relating to any practice
of gatekeepers (Art 5d);
-
refrain from requiring business users to use, offer
or interoperate with an identification service of the gatekeeper (Art 5e);
-
refrain from requiring business users or end
users to subscribe to or register with any other core platform services – this
is a ban on tying (Art 5f);
-
refrain from using any not publicly available
data about the activities of business users or their end users to compete with
those business users, an issue that arose in the Amazon investigation (Art
6(1)(a));
-
Prevent end users from un-installing any
pre-installed software applications (Art 6(1)(b));
-
Rank the own products of the gatekeeper more
favourably than similar third-party products – this came up in the Google
Shopping decision (Art 6(1)(d));
-
Technically restrict the ability of end users to
switch between and subscribe to different software applications and services to
be accessed using the gatekeeper’s operating system – ie, lock ins are not
permitted (Art 6(1)(e)).
Positive
Obligations
-
allow business users to offer the same products
or services to end users through third party online intermediation services
at prices or conditions
that are different
from those offered through the online intermediation services of the
gatekeeper (MFN clauses) – currently platforms impose significant restraints on
their business users in this regard as can be seen for example in the eBooks
settlement (Art 5b));
-
allow
business users to
promote offers to
end users acquired
via the core
platform service, and to conclude contracts with these end users
regardless of whether for that purpose they
use the core
platform services of
the gatekeeper or not
(so for example Apple’s
requirement to use its in-app purchase system or even its app store) (Art
5c));
-
allow end users to access and use software
application of a business user where software was acquired
without using the core platform services of the gatekeeper (Art 5c));
-
provide
advertisers and publishers
to which it
supplies advertising services price information in relation to
advertising services (Art 5g);
-
allow
the installation and
effective use of
third party software
applications or software application
stores using, or
interoperating with, operating
systems of that gatekeeper and
allow these software
applications or software
application stores to be accessed
by means other
than the core
platform services of
that gatekeeper (Art 6(1)(c));
-
apply FRAND conditions to rankings (Article
6(1)(d)), which might also reflect concerns in the P2B
Regulation;
-
give business users and providers of ancillary
services (eg payment processors, cloud hosts, digital identity providers, and
ad-tech sellers) access to and interoperability with the same operating system,
hardware or software features that are available or used by the gatekeeper
itself (Art 6(1)(f));
-
provide data to allow independent verification
of ad inventory (Art 6(1)(g));
-
ensure effective data portability – and
real-time access (art 6(1)(h));
-
provide business users free of charge with
effective, high-quality, continuous and real-time access to and use of
aggregated and non-aggregated data (subject to GDPR) – this essentially ensures
businesses can have access to their own business data (Art 6(1)(i));
-
provide third-party providers of search engines
with access on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms to ranking,
query, click and view data generated by end users (Art 6(1)(j));
-
FRAND conditions for access for business users
to the gatekeeper’s app store (Art 6(1)(k)).
By contrast to the position under
competition law, in acting against these behaviours the Commission would not
have to prove their impact on competition on the market, though the
Commission’s ability to intervene under its competition powers remain
unaffected. The Commission seems
therefore to have decided that concerns about pro-competitive effects of some
behaviours (including self-preferencing) do not outweigh gains from clear rules
for efficient enforcement. There have been some concerns that these closely
defined prohibitions may not be appropriate for all gatekeepers, and it remains
to be seen how the refinement levers of qualitative factors (as regards the
designation as gatekeeper in the first place) and the obligations that are
susceptible to specification (in Article 6) operate.
Note that these provisions apply
to services that are offered across the gatekeeper’s core services; they do not
require the interoperability of core services necessarily, nor benefit third
party service providers who do not operate on the core services.
The regulation also introduces
provisions empowering the Commission to carry out market investigations for any
of three purposes: identifying gatekeepers that are not captured by the
quantitative thresholds of the DMA; identifying other services that should be
added to the list of core platform services or new practices that may be
unfair; identifying proportionate behavioural or structural remedies in the
case of systematic infringement of the rules by a gatekeeper. Article 10 gives
the Commission the power to adopt delegated acts to update the lists in Articles
5 and 6 when it discovers unfair practices in a market investigation. This new tool is arguably less far reaching
than the new competition tool originally envisaged because of competence issues
and the limits of Article 114 TFEU.
The DMA obliges gatekeepers to
inform the Commission of any proposed merger or acquisition involving another
provider of core platform services or of any other services provided in the
digital sector. For these purposes, it is irrelevant whether such an
acquisition triggers a notification requirement under the EU (or national)
merger control rules. This is not a specialist merger regime, but is to allow
the Commission to review gatekeeper designations and obligations.
The DMA provides for up to 10
percent of a gatekeeper’s global annual revenue in fines for violating its
rules, similar to those penalties available in competition cases. Structural remedies remain a possibility in
the case of ongoing problems or recalitrant actors (Article 16) but only where
there are no equally effective behavioural remedies.
Comment
The Commission’s proposal is
based on the assumption that there are problems and that reliance on
competition tools is insufficient to deal with the problems, partly because of
the length of time an investigation may take – for example, the Google Search
case took in excess of 6 years. The European
Court of Auditors has recently published a report to similar effect. Specifically as regards the DMA, the
Regulation flags at Recital 10 the need to ensure contestability of markets –
and in this it seems to reflect ordoliberal concerns found in many decisions
where it has sought to protect the market, with knock on benefits perhaps to
small and medium sized enterprises. The
proposal therefore adds additional measures as a complement to competition
rules. It seeks to introduce ex ante
regulation to the generally ex post competition provisions and so avoid
questions about the definition of markets, assessment of dominance and
identification of the theory of harm (for example impact on nascent competition
or on innovation). Instead the key
question is whether an operator is a “gatekeeper”.
Admittedly the cases that have
come up under the competition rules in relation to the digital environment have
been based on complex facts and raised difficult questions about application of
the usual principles, but the resort to ex ante additional regulation is not
new. This double pronged approach has been used before, notably in the
not-so-very-distant field of telecommunications – though it should be noted
that this approach is not unique to electronic communications sectors. The EU approach to telecommunications can be
seen as a model for the DMA as regards another aspect too: the decision not to
embark on structural separation of big players, or at least not as a first port
of call, but instead to rely on requiring them to open their platforms to providers
of other services, whether direct substitutes or related services. This approach can be seen in the
liberalisation of the telecommunications sector from the late 80’s on, for
example in the Access
Directive. As in the debate for data
protection, there is the question as to whether financial penalties will ever
be enough for companies as rich as the big tech companies. Some (probably American commentators) see the
unwillingness to break companies up as a significant weakness.
Another notable point is the role
of the Commission. By contrast to the
telecommunications regime, where the national regulatory authorities have had a
distinct and important role, enforcement powers lie with the Commission
exclusively – perhaps reflecting the early position with regard to competition
enforcement, where implementation of EU competition law was consolidated at EU
level. National authorities will however
participate in a Digital Markets Advisory Committee that will assist the
Commission. This location of power at
the EU level can be seen in other aspects of the proposal. The form of
instrument proposed is a regulation, meaning it would be directly applicable in
Member States’ legal systems without implementation. Moreover, the regulation
seems to be envisaged as total harmonisation in this field. Article 1(5) specifies that:
“Member States shall not impose on gatekeepers
further obligations by way of laws, regulations or administrative action for the
purpose of ensuring contestable and fair markets”,
though the field to which this
prohibition applies is restricted.
Nonetheless, this point is likely to be contentious.
As noted, a central question is
the identification of gatekeepers and there are likely to be questions about
the operators to which the DMA applies (and no specific platform has been
named).Arguably, there will be difficulties in identifying criteria that work
across the range of activities that platforms provide. The assessment (which falls on the companies
themselves) is a mix of assessing whether CPS are in issue and then looking at
the Gatekeeper criteria. Two points
should be noted; the existing definitions are themselves complex and the
developing market challenges them; secondly, it is unclear how the qualitative
criteria will operate to rebut the presumptions based on the numbers. There have been some
comments that this definition will need to be improved as the proposal
makes it way through the legislative process.
One final question relates to the
relationship between this instrument (and its motivations) and that of the GDPR
(and possibly the ePrivacy Directive) with their emphasis on the user and the
user’s privacy. While some of the ex
ante prohibitions seem to flow in the same direction as data protection rules
(notably the obligation to refrain from combining personal data as well as the
tying of identity services), there might be some tension with data portability
by businesses and access to user data, which will likely be – at least to some
extent – subject to GDPR controls. It
remains to be seen how the two will operate together, and whether competition
concerns operate to undercut data protection.
Photo credit: via Wikimedia
commons
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