>Those are a joke. Considering what's going on, those values should be orders of magnitude higher.
Frankly, I think higher fines and more aggressive fining would even further deepen the business moat that mega businesses are already developing over small and medium.
The article already describes how the current regulatory regime boosted Google and big players 20-40% directly at the cost of small and medium (not in the top 100 or top 50) sites.
Frankly, I think European countries should just take the China approach and ban American companies because there isn't going to be a regulatory structure that works here, and they're only going to hurt their domestic competition by playing this stupid game.
China doesn’t ban American companies for that reason, they ban them because political dissidents could use them to communicate privately (gmail) or publicly (YouTube Facebook twitter....). Not all American companies are banned, either.
I'm sorry but anti-trust for foreign companies is kind of a joke. The French government et al literally cannot "break up" Google or Facebook et al, all they can do is ban Google from their territory.
Also, deep and hearty guffaw from me regarding "the business moat is irrelevant". Thinking like that is why American companies dominate European tech and not vice versa, just saying. Thinking like that is why domestic competition just took a 40% hit in Europe as the business went to largely American firms. 40%!
> Frankly, I think higher fines and more aggressive fining would even further deepen the business moat that mega businesses are already developing over small and medium.
You can always charge small companies more than the big ones. Also: witness my world's tiniest violin.
And yes, if that doesn't help, absofuckinglutely block them.
Frankly, I think higher fines and more aggressive fining would even further deepen the business moat that mega businesses are already developing over small and medium.
The article already describes how the current regulatory regime boosted Google and big players 20-40% directly at the cost of small and medium (not in the top 100 or top 50) sites.
Frankly, I think European countries should just take the China approach and ban American companies because there isn't going to be a regulatory structure that works here, and they're only going to hurt their domestic competition by playing this stupid game.