
Photo: Cointelegraph
China's market regulator finalizes rules that have been three months in the making.
China has finalized new guidelines to aid in the antitrust battle against tech giants.
On Feb 7, the State Administration for Market Regulation released finalized rules for its anti-monopoly push against e-commerce and payments giants like Alibaba, Ant Group, and Tencent.
The guidance specifically addresses "operators that provide business premises, transaction matching, information exchange, and other Internet platform services." It builds on a host of recent efforts by both the SAMR and the People's Bank of China to rein in the broader tech industry, specifically targeting payments platforms as the country continues to push forward its own central bank digital currency.
The actual terms of the guidance are fairly familiar from antitrust regulation around the world, setting out restrictions on collusion, mergers and price-fixing. It is, however, a major step in that broader context.
Just last week, Ant Group reportedly came to an arrangement to restructure its business. The firm had seen the Chinese government shut down its initial public offering in the fall under similar concerns of both Ant Group's potential monopoly and founder Jack Ma's criticism of China's financial regulation.
Cointelegraph has previously noted that authorities in China and the United States are waging similar campaigns to subdue rampant industry abuses among major players in the tech industry. Complicating these legal battles is the fact that anti-competitive measures by major tech firms oftentimes happen by manipulation of data, which requires new investigative technologies to uncover and, oftentimes, new laws to prosecute.
Reprinted from Cointelegraph, the copyright all reserved by the original author.
면책 조항: 본 게시글에 표현된 견해는 전적으로 작성자의 견해이며 Followme의 공식 입장을 대변하지 않습니다. Followme는 제공된 정보의 정확성, 완전성 또는 신뢰성에 대해 책임을 지지 않으며, 서면으로 명시적으로 언급되지 않는 한 해당 내용을 기반으로 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다.

더 오래된 의견은 없습니다. 소파를 가장 먼저 잡으십시오.