Google Undertaking Over Fitbit Competition Concerns Rejected by Australian Antitrust Regulator

Australia’s antitrust regulator on Tuesday rejected an undertaking by Alphabet-owned Google that sought to address competition concerns over its planned $2.1 billion (roughly Rs. 15,400 crores) acquisition of fitness tracker maker Fitbit.

The development comes as Google remains at loggerheads with the Australian government over a number of issues, including proposed laws that will make Australia the first country in the world to force Google and Facebook to pay for news sourced from local media outlets.

In June, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) voiced concerns over the Fitbit deal, warning Google’s acquisition would give it too much of people’s data, potentially hurting competition in health and online advertising markets.

Google had sought to address those concerns by offering a court enforceable undertaking that it would behave in certain ways toward rival wearable manufacturers, not use health data for advertising and, in some circumstances, allow competing businesses access to health and fitness data.

“While we are aware that the European Commission recently accepted a similar undertaking from Google, we are not satisfied that a long-term behavioural undertaking of this type in such a complex and dynamic industry could be effectively monitored and enforced in Australia,” ACCC Chair Rod Sims said in a statement.

The regulator also noted that several other competition authorities, including the US Department of Justice, were yet to make a decision on the deal.

The ACCC said it would continue its investigation and set a new decision date of March 25, 2021.

The regulator also has inquiries open into advertising technology and mobile app stores, with reports due in January and March, respectively, focusing on the rapidly growing market power of internet giants.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


Is MacBook Air M1 the portable beast of a laptop that you always wanted? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Gadgets

Articles You May Like

U.S. Charges 7 Chinese Nationals in Major 14-Year Cyber Espionage Operation
CISA Warns: Hackers Actively Attacking Microsoft SharePoint Vulnerability
Poco F6 Tipped to Feature Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 SoC, 50-Megapixel Sony Camera
Elon Musk Says Grok AI Will Be Available to All Premium Subscribers on X ‘Later This Week’
Fire-Boltt Oracle With 4G LTE SIM Support, 1.96-Inch Display Launched in India: Price, Specifications

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *