EU antitrust chief to meet with Tim Cook to discuss fines and regulation
The European Union's Margrethe Vestager is to meet with Apple's Tim Cook, Google's Sundar Pichai and more Big Tech executives to discuss EU digital regulation.

Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President of the European Commission
Despite leading Europe's moves to increase taxation on Big Tech firms, and also to open up App Store to alternatives, EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager has previously said she is opposed to breaking up large technology firms. She described such moves as "doable," but said I think it's important we try these routes [regulation and taxation] first with the platforms."
According to Reuters, Vestager is now coming to the US to discuss these routes with the heads of Apple, Google, Broadcom, and Nvidia. She will meet with them on Thursday January 11, 2024, and Friday, January 12, 2024, in San Francisco and Palo Alto.
Vestager is also due to meet with OpenAI's chief technology officer Mira Murati, and its chief strategy officer, Jason Kwon, but no details have been announced.
The meetings see Vestager resuming her duties as EU antitrust chief, having failed to become head of the European Investment Bank. According to Reuters, antitrust experts now expect Vestager to take a tougher stance on issues such as mergers and competition.
Separately, despite Vestager arguing that breaking up Big Tech firms would "tie you up in court for a very long time," the European Commission has said that "only the mandatory divestment by Google of part of its services would address [our] competition concerns."
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Comments
Unlike the last 3 US presidents she is capable of making stuff happen. She pushed for USB C, Digital Markets Act, AI Act, and has been a fierce advocate for GDPR. These days EU is setting the standard for how things are done with legislation is copied around the world. I don't get why Cook want to meet her after having called her politics crap and sent political henchmen after her. She is known to have the memory of an elephant. Unless Cook is ready to pay and surrender then it simply won't work.
To many here it's the silent shield. Without it, Meta would have been deep into our underwear and way up our nooks and crannies!
It's what saved EU WhatsApp users from many of those nasty privacy changes Meta tried to slip in a while back.
No legislation is perfect and it will get revised but I'd rather have it over any alternative.
If anything the US is going to replicate the digital markets act in the future.
At least, Europeans don't segregate based on Blue and Green bubbles.
When Facebook took over WhatsApp it was already a major player.
Lots of promises were made by Facebook. Of course, they got caught lying (and fined by the EU IIRC) but Whatsapp wasn't Messenger. You didn't need a Facebook account.
People used it more and more, pushing it to the undisputed top of the charts.
Then, with much of the world onboard, it tried one of its moves (not unlike when Google 'simplified' it's privacy policies across services).
The GDPR was the only thing protecting EU users from that attempt by them to dig even deeper into users.
Of course, the GDPR is far more than Big Tech. Every day individuals are fined for breaking data protection rules. Often unaware that they were doing anything illegal. Small fines like 20 or 40€ up to thousands, depending on the seriousness.
Don't blame EU for Apple not making the iPhone 15 without USB C for US.
And it gets worse... American companies like HP and Dell sell their computers with a TCO certification. TCO is a Swedish trade union! But hey... we get hit by Sarbanes-Oxley and other stuff from US politicians. The world is connected.