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EU ready to crackdown on US Big Tech with new legislation

The new rules could come into place starting on January 1, 2023, though tech companies are asking for more time to implement the law.

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Coming down heavily on the US Big Tech companies, the new EU legislation may put Google, Meta, and Amazon in an uneasy spot. According to the new law deliberated upon in the EU, there will be unprecedented curbs imposed on these tech companies and on how they do business. The new law is likely to come into effect as early as next year.

Negotiators from the European and the EU member states are to hold talks on Thursday that various sources said could see both sides agree on the legislation.

“We really expect that we can reach an agreement on Thursday, that we can endorse the Digital Markets Act,” said French MEP Stephanie Yon-Courtin, a key backer of the law. This is “a historic text that will clearly change the rules of the game,” she added.

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Once adopted, the new law would give regulators in Brussels unparalleled power to take a close and up-to-the-minute look at business decisions by the giants, especially when they acquire promising startups.

The new rules could then come into place starting on January 1, 2023, though tech companies are asking for more time to implement the law.

The rules would also set a list of do’s and don’ts including forcing Apple to open up its app store to competing payment systems — a demand the maker has resisted arduously in courts for years.

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The Digital Markets Act (DMA) could also force Google and Meta-owned Facebook to reveal precious information from their world-dominating ad platforms, potentially leaving them vulnerable to new rivals.

In their final push, lawmakers from the European Parliament would also like to impose interoperability between messaging systems such as , Signal or Apple’s iMessage.

Violation of the rules could lead to fines as high as 10 per cent of annual global sales with some MEPs calling for even tougher penalties for repeat offenders.

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The big tech companies have lobbied hard against the new rules. They have also received criticism in Washington with the perception that they unfairly target US companies, though, in the latest drafts of the law, non-US giants such as Booking.com or TikTok could also be roped in.

Once a deal is reached by negotiators, the DMA would face final votes in a full session of the European Parliament as well as by ministers from the EU’s 27 member states.

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