Antitrust Investigation Initiated by UK Regulator on Microsoft and Amazon Cloud Services

Antitrust Investigation Initiated by UK Regulator on Microsoft and Amazon Cloud Services

The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority ⁢(CMA) is set to launch an investigation into the country’s⁢ cloud computing market,⁤ after⁢ a new report​ from ‌the⁣ communications regulator uncovered a number of market features that it said‌ could limit competition among providers.

The ⁤move comes seven ⁣months after the communications regulator Ofcom first raised “significant concerns” about Amazon Web Services (AWS)⁣ and Microsoft, alleging that they were harming competition in cloud infrastructure ‌services and abusing their market positions with practices that make interoperability difficult.

Three areas​ were highlighted as ⁤being a⁤ particular cause for concern:⁤ high switching fees, technical restrictions ‍on interoperability,​ and committed​ spend discounts. Ofcom’s latest report also outlines concerns⁣ it has heard about the software ‍licensing practices of​ some cloud providers,​ in particular Microsoft.

During April’s⁢ initial investigation, Ofcom said AWS and Microsoft Azure had a combined‍ UK market share ‌of‍ between 60% and 70%,⁣ while the next‌ nearest competitor, Alphabet-owned ⁢Google, has a 5% to 10% share.

“We welcome‍ Ofcom’s referral of public cloud infrastructure services to us ⁣for in-depth scrutiny. This is a ⁣£7.5bn market that ‍underpins a whole host ‌of online‌ services – from social media to AI foundation models,” said Sarah Cardell,​ CEO of the CMA,⁢ in ⁢comments published in⁣ a press release ⁤announcing the investigation. “Many ‍businesses now completely rely on ​cloud services, making effective competition ⁤in this market essential.”

The CMA will conclude ⁢its ‍investigation by April 2025.

Both Amazon and ⁢Microsoft have said they will work‌ constructively with ​the CMA as ‍it conducts its investigation ‍into​ the​ cloud⁣ services⁤ market, with a Microsoft spokesperson adding that the company ⁤is “committed to ensuring the UK cloud industry remains⁤ innovative, highly competitive ⁢and an⁢ accelerator for ​growth across ‌the ⁢economy.”

However,⁤ in a lengthier statement, an AWS spokesperson⁢ said the company ⁤disagrees with Ofcom’s ‍findings and⁣ believes they are based on a fundamental⁣ misconception of how the IT‍ sector ⁤functions, and the services and ‍discounts⁤ on offer.

“AWS designs ‍cloud services to give customers the freedom ​to choose technology ⁢that best suits ‌their needs,” the statement continued. “UK‍ companies, and the overall economy, ‍benefit from robust competition among IT providers, and the​ cloud‌ has made⁣ switching between providers easier than​ ever. Any unwarranted‌ intervention could lead‍ to unintended ‌harm to IT customers and competition.”

AWS also denied charging⁢ customers separate fees for ⁢switching data ⁤to another IT provider, stating that its customers ⁣make⁣ “hundreds of ⁢millions of data transfers​ each ⁤day in the ordinary course of business, and‍ over 90% of our customers pay nothing for data‍ transfer​ because we provide them with 100 gigabytes per month for…

2023-10-08 12:24:03
Source from www.networkworld.com

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