-
Donald Trump Taps His Personal Defense Lawyers for Top DOJ Roles - 11 mins ago
-
Taylor Swift Vancouver tour: Thousands raised for charities with auctioned tickets - 13 mins ago
-
New Apple update to help end airport nightmare as AirTags make life easier for passengers - 14 mins ago
-
Amber Discovered For the First Time in Antarctica: What You Need to Know - 15 mins ago
-
China set to report retail sales and industrial production data for October - 16 mins ago
-
Stipe Miocic unfazed by all the chatter around Tom Aspinall entering UFC 309 matchup with Jon Jones - 17 mins ago
-
Conor McGregor admits ‘taking cocaine’ on night of alleged rape - 20 mins ago
-
Biden Expands Medicaid Coverage for Children in 5 States - 29 mins ago
-
Trump might cede climate leadership to China - 30 mins ago
-
LeBron lifts Lakers past Grizzlies with 30-point triple-double - 31 mins ago
EU fines Meta over abusive practices benefiting Facebook Marketplace
Meta, the parent company of social networking site Facebook, has faced calls to do more about financial scams on its platforms.
Artur Widak | Nurphoto via Getty Images
The European Commission on Thursday fined Meta Platforms €797.72 million ($840.24 million) over abusive practices benefiting Facebook Marketplace, it said in a statement, confirming an earlier report by Reuters.
“The European Commission has fined Meta … for breaching EU antitrust rules by tying its online classified ads service Facebook Marketplace to its personal social network Facebook and by imposing unfair trading conditions on other online classified ads service providers,” the European Commission said.
Meta said it will appeal the decision, but in the meantime, it will comply and will work quickly and constructively to launch a solution which addresses the points raised.
The move by the European Commission comes two years after it accused the U.S. tech giant of giving its classified ads service Facebook Marketplace an unfair advantage by bundling the two services together.
The European Union opened formal proceedings into possible anticompetitive conduct of Facebook in June, 2021, and in December, 2022, raised concerns that Meta ties its dominant social network Facebook to its online classified ad services.
Facebook launched Marketplace in 2016 and expanded into several European countries a year later.
The EU decision argues that Meta imposes Facebook Marketplace on people who use Facebook in an illegal “tie” but Meta said that argument ignores the fact that Facebook users can choose whether to engage with Marketplace, and many do not.
Meta said the Commission claimed that Marketplace had the potential to hinder the growth of large incumbent online marketplaces in the EU but could not find any evidence of harm to competitors.
Companies risk fines of as much as 10% of their global turnover for EU antitrust violations.
Source link