The European Union fines Apple 500 million euros and Meta 200 million in separate digital cases (apnews.com)
from cabbage@piefed.social to technology@lemmy.world on 23 Apr 11:03
https://piefed.social/post/686159

European Union watchdogs fined Apple and Meta hundreds of millions of euros Wednesday as they stepped up enforcement of the 27-nation bloc’s digital competition rules.

The European Commission imposed a 500 million euro ($571 million) fine on Apple for preventing app makers from pointing users to cheaper options outside its App Store.

The commission, which is the EU’s executive arm, also fined Meta Platforms 200 million euros because it forced Facebook and Instagram users to choose between seeing ads or paying to avoid them.

#apple #dma #eu #europe #facebook #meta #regualtion #technology

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ToadOfHypnosis@lemm.ee on 23 Apr 11:11 next collapse

Not a huge blow to companies this large sadly.

cabbage@piefed.social on 23 Apr 11:30 next collapse

I think it must be seen not in light of the monetary blow, but in light of the fact that the EU is pushing hard for these actors to change directions and to end some of their abusive behaviour.

Traffic fines are made to bankrupt drivers or to finance the state, but to encourage people to drive safely.

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 23 Apr 12:03 collapse

Traffic fines are made to bankrupt drivers or to finance the state, but to encourage people to drive safely.

Yeah that really depends on location…in Denmark the minimum fine for speeding is 160€, and that’s if you’re just more than 3kmph above limit…it just increases from there and ends with something like a 1000€ fine and them withdrawing your drivers licence (a new licence is going to set you back 2000€). If you’re above 100% speeding the take the car too.

giorovv@feddit.it on 23 Apr 12:03 collapse

Not huge, indeed. It is possible, and desirable, that the EU is playing strategy with them. Maybe they hit softly now, just to show they mean to go on this regulation-path they choose, and to give a “warning”. Maybe they considered a too aggressive fine could make things worse. I’m not sure, just thinking.

MrNesser@lemmy.world on 23 Apr 11:16 next collapse

Cost of doing business They should start skimming 20% from these companies war chests

variaatio@sopuli.xyz on 23 Apr 12:09 collapse

The important part of these are the “do, don’t” orders of business conduct. Then on top small fine. Hence it isn’t merely cost of doing business. The real stinger is “you can’t offer choice of tracking or pay up. You must offer free choice to decline for consent based operations”.

If they ignore the “do’s and dont’s” compliance order, then the big fines come out.

db2@lemmy.world on 23 Apr 20:02 collapse

Name one.

edit: that’s what I thought, silence.

[deleted] on 23 Apr 11:26 next collapse

.

wewbull@feddit.uk on 23 Apr 11:47 next collapse

He was fined €240M? What had he done?

[deleted] on 23 Apr 11:51 next collapse

.

wewbull@feddit.uk on 23 Apr 11:58 collapse

Obviously. How much?

[deleted] on 23 Apr 12:02 collapse

.

cabbage@piefed.social on 23 Apr 12:08 next collapse

Steal a little, and they put you in jail. Steal a lot, and they make you king.

wewbull@feddit.uk on 23 Apr 19:48 collapse

Interesting that it’s just a cost of doing business in China as well.

cabbage@piefed.social on 23 Apr 11:51 collapse

My bet would be tax evasion and money laundering. ;)

It's hard to wrap one's head around just how freaking rich the mega wealthy are. The 1% is not even the enemy at this point, they are closer to most of us than they are to the billionaire class.

wewbull@feddit.uk on 23 Apr 11:58 collapse

I was more meaning “on what scale?”. I assume he wasn’t a few hundred short.

Flemmy@lemm.ee on 23 Apr 12:53 collapse

Fraud is punished in the free world too buddy.

primemagnus@lemmy.ca on 23 Apr 16:01 next collapse

Don’t worry once all the kickbacks and bribes are in place the actual sum should come down considerably 🫠

Goldholz@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 23 Apr 17:52 collapse

Too little