News

The European Union has fined Apple $570 million and Meta $228 million for violating the Digital Markets Act. Apple restricted ... to appeal the decisions. The Commission found that Apple violated ...
The European Commission last week fined tech giants Apple and Meta €700 million in total for non-complying with the Digital Market Act (DMA), at risk of aggravating the current trade tensions ...
Microsoft respects European laws including landmark legislation which seeks to rein in the power of Big Tech, its President ...
Exchange of views between Commission competition chief Teresa Ribera and EU Parliament's internal markets committee on the ...
As a multinational company, Microsoft believes in trans-Atlantic ties that promote mutual economic growth and prosperity.
The chair of the US Federal Trade Commission Andrew Ferguson stated earlier this month that sanctions for breaches imposed by the EU under its Digital Markets Act should be considered taxes levied on ...
The EU’s target to gain a 20pc share of global production value in cutting‑edge and sustainable microchips by 2030, is not ...
Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers also said Apple's finance president, Alex Roman, "outright lied under oath" and slammed company executives for not complying with her ruling.
The chair of the US Federal Trade Commission Andrew Ferguson stated earlier this month that sanctions for breaches imposed by the EU under its Digital Markets Act should be considered taxes levied ...
EU policymakers are considering setting threshold measures of computational resources to help businesses determine whether – ...
Picture: Canva The European ... “So today, the commission has imposed fines of 500 million euros to Apple and 200 million euros to Meta for breaching the Digital Market Act.