Internal Market and Economic Affairs Committees discussed the legislative proposals to better protect consumers and create fairer platform economy with Executive Vice-President Vestager.
The
Digital Services Act and the Digital Markets Act were the focus of two
European Parliament Committee meetings throughout Tuesday. European
Commission Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager presented the
legislative proposals saying that the goal is to create a single
European rulebook to tackle various challenges currently faced with
online platforms from hate speech, disinformation and election
manipulation to the sale of dangerous and counterfeit products and
unfair market access of SMEs.
Consumer protection
Internal Market and Consumer Protection
committee MEPs concentrated their comments on consumer protection,
scrutinising the options to curb the power and control of big tech,
including their access and use of people’s personal data, e.g. for
targeted advertising, and ways to guarantee product safety, including
the question of limited liability of platforms for the quality of
products sold.
Other questions tackled included
interoperability to enhance competition, algorithm transparency, and
acquisitions and mergers in the digital sector.
Improving competition
During the debate with MEPs of the
Economic and Monetary Affairs committee, the focus was on how the
legislation being proposed would help protect competition in the EU, by
speedily tackling the monopolistic nature of the digital sector and its
fast evolving environment. MEPs expressed some doubts that the rules
would allow the Commission to act decisively and quickly enough, or that
the penalties envisaged were consequent enough.
Numerous MEPs also raised fears over who
would be controlling the ‘gatekeepers’. Some said that the legislation
proposed risked not being enough to do this whereas others said that the
legislation was simply giving gatekeepers too much leeway.
Catch up with the debates
The debate in the Internal Market committee is available here and in the Economic and Monetary Affairs committee here (scroll to 17:50).
Background
- Parliament adopted in October two legislative initiative reports
calling on the Commission to revise the E-Commerce Directive and to
adopt a new ex ante internal market instrument to regulate online
platforms with a gatekeeper role in the digital economy.
- The Commission presented the proposals for a comprehensive set of rules
for all digital services, including social media, online market places,
and other online platforms that operate in the European Union on 15
December. Read the first reaction by Committee Chair Anna Cavazzini here.
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