EU gives Google more time on Digital Markets Act breach
The European Commission has provided Google with an extension to address concerns regarding a potential breach of the Digital Markets Act (DMA). The decision comes after Google's initial response to the inquiry, with the Commission stating that simply issuing a fine would formalize the infringement rather than resolve it.
Key Takeaways
- European Commission granted Google extra time after its initial response to the DMA inquiry.
- The case centers on a potential breach of the Digital Markets Act.
- The Commission said issuing a fine would formalize the infringement rather than fix it.
Why It Matters
The immediate effect is procedural: Google has more time to respond, and the Commission is signaling that a fine is not its preferred first move. For the broader platform ecosystem, the DMA remains an active enforcement tool, but this case shows regulators may push for remediation before penalties. For streaming and adjacent digital businesses, the practical question is how quickly this inquiry moves from extended review to a formal decision. The next concrete signal is whether the Commission issues a fine or takes another enforcement step after Google’s revised response.
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