bbieron@platformeconomyinsights.com

Antitrust Activists Push Back on UK Naming Amazon Exec to Head CMA

Feb 12, 2025

Report from TechCrunch

In Brief – A coalition of voices in the vanguard of antitrust activism against Big Tech have signed an open letter expressing concern with the UK Government’s recent decision to appoint a former Amazon executive as chair of the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). Harkening back to the competition agenda that only last year led to passage of the UK Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act (DMCC) that created the Digital Markets Unit (DMU) inside the CMA to regulate the largest digital platforms, the group said that the new regulator needed to be “free from political pressure” if it’s to keep Big Tech in check and “unlock positive economic outcomes for the whole economy.” The letter was spurred by the recent removal of the Chair of the CMA Board of Directors for failing to effectively direct the antitrust regulator to prioritize the government’s economic growth agenda. Doug Gurr, a former Amazon executive who once led its UK business, was named as the CMA’s interim chair, which was taken by many observers as a signal of cooperation rather than conflict with giant tech companies.

Context – Presenting the UK as a more reasonable regulator than the EU, and therefore an appealing market for business investment, was always a theme of the pro-Brexit Conservative Governments. But their tech policies were schizophrenic. The differences between the UK DMCC and the EU DMA, or the UK Online Safety Act and the EU DSA, or the CMA’s Big Tech antitrust portfolio and the EU Competition Authority’s, were in the fine print and the UK’s slower and more orderly regulatory pace. And the Labor Party backed those laws. But AI and associated investment is now a top UK priority and PM Starmer recently said that his government will offer investors “stability, pragmatism and the good sense they would expect from democratic British values.” But there is much more to digital regulation than just AI. And while sacking the Chair of the CMA just as DMCC regulatory processes really ramp up sent one signal, there is the report that Apple is being ordered to end strong encryption by UK security services that will likely resonate negatively with many tech leaders.

View By Monthly
Latest Blog
Apple Still Trying to Reverse Epic Antitrust Loss at Supreme Court

Report from Reuters In Brief – Apple has asked the US Supreme Court to review a lower court ruling that found the company in civil contempt for violating an injunction tied to its long-running legal fight with Epic Games. The Apple v Epic antitrust dispute began in...

Trump Cancels Executive Order on “Voluntary” AI Security Reviews

Report from the Washington Post In Brief – President Donald Trump cancelled signing a major executive order on artificial intelligence after last-minute lobbying from leading tech industry figures, including Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and former White House AI...

X Commits to Strengthen Anti-Terror Content Moderation in the UK

Report from The Guardian In Brief – Ofcom, the UK regulator enforcing the Online Safety Act (OSA), has announced that X has agreed to strengthen its moderation of terrorist and hate-related content. The commitments stem from Ofcom’s discussions with the top social...

Meta Joins Snap, TikTok and YouTube to Settle School District Lawsuit

Report from the New York Times In Brief – Meta has reached reached a settlement agreement in the first lawsuit headed to trial in federal court over claims that addiction to social media platforms has pushed public schools to spend massive sums fighting a youth mental...

Platform Economy Insights produces a short email four times a week that reviews two top stories with concise analysis. It is the best way to keep on top of the news you should know. Sign up for this free email here.

* indicates required