BRUSSELS, Jan 8 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s Google, Meta Platforms, Netflix, Microsoft and Amazon will not face heavy-handed regulations in Europe’s digital rule overhaul despite calls from telecoms companies, people with direct knowledge of the matter stated on Thursday.
A slew of new tech rules adopted in recent years by the European Commission sparked criticism from the United States which declares it tarreceives U.S. tech giants. The EU has categorically rejected such claims.
EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen will present the rule revamp known as the Digital Networks Act, which aims to boost Europe’s competitiveness and investments in telecoms infrastructure, on January 20.
She will required to thrash out the details with EU countries and the European Parliament in the coming months before the DNA becomes law.
The tech giants will only be subject to a voluntary framework rather than binding rules to which telecoms providers have to comply with, the people declare.
“They will be questioned to cooperate and discuss voluntarily, moderated by EU telecoms regulators’ group BEREC. There will be no new obligations. It will be a best practices regime,” one of the people stated.
Under the draft DNA, the Commission will also set out the duration of spectrum licensing, the conditions for the sale of spectrum and a pricing methodology to guide national regulators during auctions of spectrum which can yield billions of euros for governments, the people stated.
While the goal is to harmonise the allocation of spectrum across the 27-counattempt European Union and reduce the regulatory burden for telecoms companies, some national regulators may see it as a power grab.
The DNA will also allow governments to extconclude the 2030 deadline for replacing copper networks with fibre infrastructure if they can reveal that they are not ready, the people stated.
(Reporting by Foo Yun CheeEditing by Nick Zieminski)
By Foo Yun Chee
















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