EU to probe Alexa, Siri and other voice assistants over data breach fears

The EU has opened similar queries in the past into sectors such as e-commerce and pharmaceuticals. 
EU to probe Alexa, Siri and other voice assistants over data breach fears
EU Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager, has made the tech industry the centrepiece of her enforcement efforts, taking on Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook in recent years. Picture: EPA/STEPHANIE LECOCQ

EU competition regulators are seeking information from 400 companies to establish if there are problems in the market for voice assistants such as Alexa and Siri and other internet-connected devices that could lead to antitrust cases.

The European Commission has opened similar inquiries in the past into sectors such as e-commerce, pharmaceuticals, financial services and energy that led to cases against companies and eventually hefty fines.

Amazon’s Alexa, Apple’s Siri and Alphabet’s Google Assistant are among the most popular voice assistant devices.

“It sends an important message to powerful operators in these market that we are watching them and that they need to do business in line with competition rules,” European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said.

The EU executive said its interest was prompted by the large amounts of user data involved in consumer “internet of things” devices and it wanted to make sure market players did not use their control of such data to hurt competition or thwart rivals.

“Interoperability is of the essence if we want to make this market accessible,” Ms Vestager said.

Ms Vestager, who can fine companies up to 10% of their global turnover for breaching EU antitrust rules, has made the tech industry the centrepiece of her enforcement efforts, taking on Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook in recent years.

Last August, Luxembourg’s privacy regulator asked Amazon for information regarding its Alexa voice assistant, an indication even then of rising regulatory unease over companies’ use of personal data.

On the back of that move, Amazon said it had taken steps to resolve any concerns.

-Reuters

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