EU Is Weighing Whether Internet Services Are Essential

EU Is Weighing Whether Internet Services Are Essential
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The European Union’s antitrust chief is weighing whether internet services are “essential“ to modern life in the same way as electricity grids and telecommunications suppliers, according to Bloomberg. That is a potentially game-changing question for technology giants such as Google and Facebook.

EU officials are trying to understand “in depth“ whether the internet is “approaching something that we would call an essential facility," EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager told reporters in The Hague, the Netherlands. She didn’t name any specific companies.

Declaring Google’s search engine or Facebook’s social network as essential facilities would expand the boundaries of antitrust enforcement in Europe, possibly allowing regulators to set strict curbs on online platforms to protect businesses and consumers that rely on the services. Vestager said she wants to start a debate and that the EU’s current investigations into Google’s mobile-phone software and advertising contracts don’t question whether Google is essential. The legal threshold for declaring a service essential must show that it is prohibitively costly to establish and necessary to other companies for them to compete, she said.

An EU deep dive into the limits of antitrust in the technology industry comes as Germany’s cartel office examines whether Facebook abuses a monopoly position by imposing unfair privacy terms on users. The EU’s competition investigators have been more reluctant to look at privacy issues but are increasingly interested in looking at how companies plan to use data from a takeover target.

Vestager said regulators had "an open mind" on a probe of Apple’s takeover of music-recognition app Shazam. They want "to understand in detail if linking up those databases might make it harder for anyone to compete," she said in a speech in The Hague.