Microsoft was hit with a Spanish startup group’s complaint about its cloud practices to the Spanish antitrust regulator on Tuesday, the latest grievance over its fast-growing cloud computing services and which followed a trade group’s EU complaint.
The U.S. tech giant ranks second in the cloud computing sector, behind market leader Amazon, but is expected to close the gap rapidly as a clutch of generative AI features powered by OpenAI’s technology attract business users.
The Spanish Startup Association, which represents more than 700 startups in Spain, cited a number of allegedly anticompetitive practices by Microsoft in recent years.
“Microsoft has not only taken advantage of the dominant position in the markets of Operating Systems (Windows) and traditional productivity software (Microsoft Office, Windows Server, SQL Server) to force the use of its Azure cloud, but they have also imposed artificial barriers that limit the ability of startups to compete fairly and competitively,” the complaint seen by Reuters said.
“These practices include barriers to data portability or contractual conditions that restrict competition in software licenses, preventing the free choice of providers of these services, reducing the capacity for choice and flexibility that startups need to be able to be resilient, innovate and grow,” the document said.
The association called on the Spanish competition watchdog to launch an investigation and to take urgent measures to ensure a competitive market.
“We believe that all companies should be able to compete in an environment of equality so as not to be left behind either as customers or as companies providing this technology,” Carlos Mateo, president of the Spanish Startup Association, said in a statement.
Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE), whose members include Amazon, last November complained to EU antitrust regulators about Microsoft’s new contract terms imposed on October 1, along with other practices, saying these were harming the European cloud computing ecosystem.
The European Commission has asked cloud rivals about Microsoft’s request for customer data as part of its investigation while the UK Competition and Markets Authority is also probing the sector.
—Foo Yun Chee, Reuters
Accedi per aggiungere un commento
Altri post in questo gruppo

Think you’ve got game? Time to put it to the test with Tinder’s latest launch in collaboration with OpenAI.
On Tuesday, Tinder rolled out The Game Game—a new experience designed to help

The old Tesla can’t come to the phone right now. Why? Oh, ‘cause she’s dead.
Over the past few days, a new trend has emerged on TikTok: people are posting their Tesla trade-ins accompani

Despite a ">triumphant world premiere at Cannes last May, the politically unsparing Donald Trump biopic The Apprentice was stuck in

Countless hours, days—perhaps even weeks—of my life have been spent creating Sims characters, building them houses, marrying them off, and making babies. Now, there’s a new life-simulatio

A bitcoin investor who bought a SpaceX flight for himself and three polar explorers blasted

Spatial intelligence is an emerging approach to deploying AI in the physical world. By combining mapping data with artificial intelligence, it aims to deliver “smart data” tied to specific locatio

Ukraine’s war with Russia—sparked by Russia’s invasion in the spring of 2022—is now entering its fourth year. So t