EU opens anti-trust probe into Amazon over data use
The EU on Wednesday launched a formal investigation into how Amazon uses data from independent merchants selling products on its websites.
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EU competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager said she would take a “very close look at Amazon's business practices and its dual role as marketplace and retailer, to assess its compliance with EU competition rules”.
According to preliminary fact-finding by the commission, Amazon appeared to use “competitively sensitive information” – about marketplace sellers, their products and transactions.
"European consumers are increasingly shopping online. E-commerce has boosted retail competition and brought more choice and better prices. We need to ensure that large online platforms don't eliminate these benefits through anti-competitive behaviour,” Vestager said.
The probe will investigate standard agreements between Amazon and third-party merchants and how “the use of accumulated marketplace seller data by Amazon as a retailer affects competition”.
The commission is also looking into how retailers “won” the so-called 'Buy Box' button which allows customers to directly add a product to their online shopping cart.
For a retailer, “winning” the buy box means that when a customer searches for a particular product, and then clicks to buy it, that retailer’s offer, rather than competing ones, will be chosen.
“Winning the “Buy Box” seems key for marketplace sellers as a vast majority of transactions are done through it,” the EU said in a statement.