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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Strasbourg, France (AFP) Jan 20, 2022
The European Parliament on Thursday approved a proposal to impose unprecedented curbs on content online, including bans on the most intrusive methods of advertising, in a blow to Google and Facebook. Lawmakers overwhelmingly voted in favour of their version of the Digital Services Act (DSA), which is aimed at ensuring tougher consequences for platforms and websites that violate a long list of rules on content. The DSA is a companion text to the EU's Digital Markets Act, which is specifically focused on the tech behemoths like Meta/Facebook, Alphabet/Google, Amazon, Apple and Microsoft. EU member states in November already approved their own version of both laws, and highly delicate negotiations will now take place to reconcile the legislative texts. "The largest platforms can no longer hide behind a veil of ignorance," Danish MEP Christel Schaldemose, who spearheaded the law through parliament, said after its adoption. "They'll be forced to face up to the consequences of their algorithms," she said, calling the law a new "gold standard" in tech regulation. Big tech companies that violate the rules face fines of as much as six percent of their global sales. "What happens on the internet, parents see it, it's the Wild West," said EU commissioner Thierry Breton, who tabled the original proposal in December 2020. "We don't know what kids are doing anymore... harassment, hate speech, attacks on democracy, personal attacks, counterfeit products." With the DSA, "what is allowed in everyday life will be allowed on the internet, but everything that is prohibited will be as well," he told RTL radio in France. - 'Battle not over' - Some MEPs had hoped for a flat-out ban on online tracking for advertising, as well as more painful consequences for big tech companies when they let illegal or harmful content through. The case to be tough was made in November by Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen, who urged lawmakers not to lose their resolve. "The battle is not over," said French MEP David Cormand of the Greens group, who defended the DSA as a "first step". "We need to be more ambitious in tackling the manipulative algorithms and the divisive business models of Big Tech," he said. Striking compromise legislation will be up to the French government, which took over the EU's six-month presidency on January 1 and will be negotiating with senior MEPs on a final outcome. During that time, big tech companies and other interests will continue to lobby furiously to influence the final law. Breton deplored the "increased lobbying efforts", which he said were "in vain". France's minister for EU affairs, Clement Beaune, said that the DSA was "an opportunity for Europe to set new global standards in regulating content of the major platforms." The EU parliamnetary vote "is a major step", he said.
Google appeals 2.4-bn-euro Shopping fine at top EU court The tech giant said it would go to the European Court of Justice, the EU's highest court, after the General Court confirmed in November a decision by the European Commission in 2017. At the time, the fine was the European Union's biggest ever. But it was later exceeded by a 4.3-billion-euro fine against Google over its Android smartphone operating system. "After careful consideration, we have decided to appeal the General Court's decision because we feel there are areas that require legal clarification from the European Court of Justice," a short statement by the company said. The case centres on Google's shopping service and is one of three against the search engine giant currently moving through the EU's drawn-out appeals system. The new appeal could take up to two years to reach an outcome, stretching the case out to well more than a decade after the commission launched its investigation in 2010. The court confirmation on Google Shopping was a win for the EU's anti-trust supremo Margrethe Vestager, who burst onto the scene in Brussels by scrapping her predecessor's more conciliatory approach to the US internet giant. Vestager had lost in the same court in a different major case, against Apple and Ireland, in which her teams had ordered the iPhone maker to repay 13 billion euros plus interest to the Irish taxpayer. The EU has appealed that ruling. The fine for Google came after seven years of investigation launched by complaints from other price-comparison services that saw traffic plummet against Google Shopping.
![]() ![]() Tonga undersea cable needs 'at least' four weeks to repair Wellington (AFP) Jan 19, 2022 An undersea cable connecting volcano- and tsunami-hit Tonga with the rest of the world will take at least a month to repair, New Zealand's foreign ministry said Wednesday. "US cable company SubCom advises it will take at least four weeks for Tonga's cable connection to be repaired," the ministry said in an update on the disaster, which has cut the small South Pacific nation from the rest of the world. Tonga has been isolated since Saturday's violent eruption severed the cable in two places. ... read more
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