The Digital Markets Act sets obligations for large online platforms acting as “gatekeepers” and enables the Commission to sanction non-compliant behaviour. 
      
    
    
      
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
        
    
        
            
            
            
            
                
    
    
        
            On Monday, Parliament’s Internal Market Committee endorsed the provisionally reached agreement
 with EU governments on the Digital Markets Act (DMA) with 43 votes in 
favour, one against and one abstention. Together with the parallel Digital Services Act (DSA),
 the DMA will address a number of societal and economic issues by 
limiting the market power of big online platforms and to make the 
digital market safer, fairer and more competitive.
The rules will apply to large companies,
 so-called “gatekeepers” whose dominant online position make them hard 
for consumers to avoid. To be designated as a gatekeeper, a company has 
to provide a “core platform services” most prone to unfair business 
practices. This may include platforms such as social networks, 
messengers, virtual assistants, or search engines among others with EU 
turnover exceeding 7.5 billion euro or a market value exceeding 75 
billion euro, and at least 45 million monthly end users and 10,000 
annual business users.
A list of “do’s and don’ts” for gatekeepers
Gatekeepers will have to comply with a 
series of obligations, including ensuring the interoperability of their 
messaging services with smaller ones. This means that smaller platforms 
will be able to request dominant messaging platforms open up to enable 
their users to exchange messages, send voice messages or files across 
messaging apps. This will give users greater choice and avoid the 
so-called “lock-in” effect where they are restricted to one app or 
platform.
Gatekeepers shall allow users to easily 
un-install any pre-loaded software apps and to easily change default 
settings that steer users towards the gatekeepers products or services. 
Users will also have the possibility to use third-party applications and
 app stores.
Large online platforms will no longer be
 able to process users’ personal data, unless consent is explicitly 
given, nor will they be able to rank their own products or services more
 favourably (self-referencing).
Strict penalties for non-compliance
If a gatekeeper does not comply with the
 rules, the Commission can impose fines of up to 10% of its total 
worldwide turnover in the preceding financial year, and heavier 
penalties up to 20% in case of repeated non-compliance. In case of 
systematic infringements, the Commission may ban gatekeepers from 
acquiring other companies for a certain time (so-called killer 
acquisitions).
Parliament
      
      
      
      
        © European Parliament
     
      
      
      
      
      
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