Amazon Also Under Pressure from EU Regulators

We’ve recently covered Meta’s challenges with European regulators. According to a recent story in Reuters, Meta isn’t the only big tech big dog to find itself in European regulators’ crosshairs. 

Reuters reports that the European Commission is asking Amazon to provide more information to demonstrate its compliance with the Digital Services Act. This is not the same as the Digital Marketing Act, another thorn in big tech’s side.

E64 Explores Big Tech’s EU Regulatory Reckoning

Specifically, according to Reuters, Amazon has been asked to “provide detailed information on its compliance with the provisions concerning transparency of the recommender systems.”

According to Search Engine Land, the request delved into Amazon’s ad repository and risk assessment reporting practices as well. 

Amazon has been told to cough up the info by July 26. The company said it is reviewing the request.

Big Tech’s Regulatory Reckoning

What’s it all About, Amazon?

So what does this mean? Is this just a routine Eurocratic information request? Or is it a shot across Amazon’s bow to signal that tougher scrutiny is on its way? Amazon has a big bow, so any shot across it needs to be loud. And the splash it makes needs to be big. 

Or does it? This seemingly routine info request comes amid a recent spate of actions against mostly U.S.-based big tech firms that signal regulators are eager to enforce the big acts to protect consumer privacy and ensure open competition. The big acts in question are the Digital Marketing Act (DMA) and the Digital Services Act (DSA). 

Perhaps this latest info request is merely a fishing expedition by regulators. Perhaps they assume any big tech company is violating the act. They just need to keep looking until they find something. 

Everyone favors consumer protection and open competition. Yet one does get the sense that EU regulators are determined to take U.S.-based big tech down a peg. If only to give homegrown eCommerce sites and others a fighting chance.

My colleague Mike Boland and I said a version of this on This Week in Local, the Localogy podcast we co-host. 

In March we wrote about how regulators warned Apple, Alphabet (i.e., Google), and Meta that they faced significant fines if they were found to be violating the EU Digital Marketing Act. By significant we mean up to 10% of annual global revenue – in other words, beaucoup d’argent.

Share Article...

Follow Us...

Stay ahead of the curve and get the latest on Local straight to your inbox.

By submitting this form, you agree to receive communications from Localogy. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Related Resources

Yelp Drops 35+ Features, Puts AI Assistant at Core of Local Search

Yelp Drops 35+ Features, Puts AI Assistant at Core of Local Search

Yelp this week announced its Spring product release. This comes every year with a treasure trove of updates across Yelp’s products and functions. This year’s theme is unsurprisingly AI – including user-facing features to find local businesses, and SMB-facing features for automated task completion. 

An SMB AI Killer App Emerges: Responding to Reviews

One of the places AI is being integrated in local business marketing is responding to reviews. This was an example cited several times at Localogy’s L26. What’s the opportunity to do this? What are pitfalls? And who’s doing it right?

The New Online-Visibility Playbook Takes Center Stage

One of the biggest questions looming over the digital media sphere is the degree to which traditional SEO carries into the emerging art of AI SEO, or GEO. Though this is a moving target given the pace of AI market shifts, the answer appears to be that some, but not all, SEO primes the pump for AI SEO.