On 23 December 2022 the Bundeskartellamt sent Alphabet Inc., Mountain
View, USA, Google Ireland Ltd., Dublin, Ireland, and Google Germany
GmbH, Hamburg, Germany, its preliminary legal assessment in the
proceeding initiated due to Google’s data processing terms. At this
stage of the proceeding, the Bundeskartellamt assumes that the new
provisions for large digital companies (Section 19a of the German
Competition Act, GWB) are applicable and Google thus has to change its
data processing terms and its associated practices.

Andreas Mundt, President of the Bundeskartellamt: "“Google’s business
model relies heavily on the processing of user data. Due to its
established access to relevant data gathered from a large number of
different services, Google enjoys a strategic advantage over other
companies. Google’s practices must be measured against the requirements
under the new competition rules for large digital companies. The
company has to give users sufficient choice as to how their data are
processed.”"

Based on its current terms, Google can combine a variety of data from
various services and use them, for example, to create very detailed
user profiles which the company can exploit for advertising and other
purposes, or to train functions provided by services. The company’s
terms set out that Google may, for various purposes, collect and
process data across services, for example by way of its numerous own,
partly very widely used services, such as Google Search, YouTube,
Google Play, Google Maps and Google Assistant, but also by way of
numerous third-party websites and apps. This also concerns data from
Google’s so-called background services, including the Google Play
services, which to some extent gather data from Android devices on a
regular basis.

The Bundeskartellamt has reached the preliminary conclusion that, based
on the current terms, users are not given sufficient choice as to
whether and to what extent they agree to this far-reaching processing
of their data across services. The choices offered so far, if any, are,
in particular, not sufficiently transparent and too general. According
to the Bundeskartellamt’s current assessment, sufficient choice
particularly requires that users are able to limit the processing of
data to the specific service used. In addition, they also have to be
able to differentiate between the purposes for which the data are
processed. Moreover, the choices offered must not be devised in a way
that makes it easier for users to consent to the processing of data
across services than not to consent to this. General and indiscriminate
data retention and processing across services without a specific cause
as a preventive measure, including for security purposes, is not
permissible either without giving users any choice. Therefore, the
Bundeskartellamt is currently planning to oblige the company to change
the choices offered.

In December 2021, the authority already determined that Google is of
paramount significance for competition across markets pursuant to
Section 19a GWB. Under these circumstances, the new provision for large
digital companies allows the Bundeskartellamt to prohibit such
companies from engaging in certain anti-competitive practices.

In its proceeding, the Bundeskartellamt bases its assessment on German
competition law. The European Digital Markets Act (DMA), which is
exclusively enforced by the European Commission, is also likely to
apply to certain Google services in the future. While the DMA also
includes a provision which addresses the processing of data across
services, this applies only if so-called core platform services, which
still have to be designated by the European Commission, are involved.
The present proceeding based on the national provision under Section
19a GWB partially exceeds the future requirements of the DMA. In this
regard, the Bundeskartellamt is in close contact with the European
Commission.

The Bundeskartellamt is conducting an administrative proceeding against
Google. The statement of objections outlining detailed reasons is a
first intermediate step which gives the company the opportunity to
comment in detail on the authority’s preliminary assessment and to
present further reasons justifying its practices or suggestions to
dispel the Bundeskartellamt’s concerns. The proceeding may result in
the authority discontinuing the case, the company offering commitments
or the competition authority prohibiting Google’s practices. A final
decision in this matter is expected to be issued in 2023.


https://www.bundeskartellamt.de/SharedDocs/Meldung/EN/Pressemitteilungen/2023/11_01_2023_Google_Data_Processing_Terms.html
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