Almost
two
years
after
EU
regulators
first
accused
Meta
of
“abusive
practices”
that
gave
the
tech
giant
unfair
market
advantages,
the
European
Commission
has
fined
Meta
€797.7
million
(around
$840
million).
The
combination
of
forcing
Facebook
users
to
be
exposed
to
Marketplace
and
imposing
restrictions
against
third-party
classified
ads
providers
on
the
platform
are
the
two
main
reasons
cited
for
the
fine.
In
a
statement,
the
EU’s
competition
head
Margrethe
Vestager
accused
Meta
of
abusing
its
dominant
position
in
the
social
media
market
“to
benefit
its
own
service
Facebook
Marketplace,
thereby
giving
it
advantages
that
other
online
classified
ads
service
providers
could
not
match.
This
is
illegal
under
EU
antitrust
rules.”
The
European
Commission
has
ordered
Meta
to
“bring
the
conduct
effectively
to
an
end,”
but
didn’t
specify
what
actions
should
be
taken.
Meta
was
also
hit
with
a
record-breaking
$1.3
billion
fine
by
the
EU
last
year
for
transferring
the
Facebook
data
of
EU
citizens
to
the
US.
“We
will
appeal
the
decision,”
Meta
announced
in
response
to
the
ruling.
“In
the
meantime,
we
will
comply,
and
will
work
quickly
and
constructively
to
launch
a
solution
which
addresses
the
points
raised.”
In
its
response,
Meta
says
that
the
EU’s
decision
ignores
that
Facebook
users
can
opt
not
to
engage
with
the
Marketplace
service
and
that
the
case
rests
on
a
“hypothetical
potential
to
harm
competition.”
(Originally posted by Jess Weatherbed)
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