Article 6CVXD Large EU Internet Retailer Whines That It Shouldn’t Have To Comply With The DSA’s Most Stringent Rules

Large EU Internet Retailer Whines That It Shouldn’t Have To Comply With The DSA’s Most Stringent Rules

by
Mike Masnick
from Techdirt on (#6CVXD)
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A few months ago, when the EU designated 17 companies as VLOPs" - Very Large Online Providers - subject to the most stringent regulations, one name that I heard lots of folks in the US be confused about was Zalando, which is a large EU-focused online retailer. It was also one of only two companies actually based in the EU to be designated as such (Booking.com was the other). And it seems that Zalando was just as surprised as everyone else, as it has now sued to challenge that designation.

Germany's Zalando on Tuesday contested the labelling methodology and took its case to the Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the European Union, Europe's top court.

The company said the Commission had failed to take into account the hybrid nature of its business model and the fact it does not present a systemic risk of disseminating harmful or illegal content from third parties.

The European Commission misinterpreted our user numbers and failed to acknowledge our mainly retail business model. The number of European visitors who connect with our Partners is far below the DSA's threshold to be considered as a VLOP," Zalando CEO Robert Gentz said in a statement.

Of course it does seem at least somewhat eyebrow raising to see an EU company as the first one to challenge this law. It almost feels like they naturally assumed that this law was only supposed to apply to those foreign internet companies, rather than the EU's own companies.

The response from the EU's internet czar, Thierry Breton (who always comes off as a bit too smug and gleeful about his power to suppress speech) is pretty laughable as well, claiming that he thinks companies should be happy to face his ridiculous, speech suppressing, compliance-nightmare-inducing regulations:

Complying with the DSA is not a punishment - I encourage all platforms to see it as an opportunity to reinforce their brand value and reputation as a trustworthy site," he said in a statement.

That's just disconnected from reality. If it was simply an opportunity to reinforce their brand value and reputation as a trustworthy site," then you wouldn't need to have a regulation with massive potential fines backing it up. Companies already have plenty of incentive to reinforce their brand value" without having to hire a shitload of compliance lawyers.

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