Google-Fitbit takeover: EU launches full-scale probe

Laveta Brigham

Google Fitbit The European Commission will carry out a full-scale probe into Google’s takeover of Fitbit. The announcement follows a preliminary review, and threatens to derail the purchase of the fitness-tracking firm. It comes despite Google’s offer last month to not use Fitbit’s health data for ad targeting. Google’s parent […]

Google Fitbit
Google Fitbit

The European Commission will carry out a full-scale probe into Google’s takeover of Fitbit.

The announcement follows a preliminary review, and threatens to derail the purchase of the fitness-tracking firm.

It comes despite Google’s offer last month to not use Fitbit’s health data for ad targeting.

Google’s parent company Alphabet agreed a $2.1bn (£1.6bn) takeover of the wearable tech firm last year. However, the deal has yet to be completed.

“The commission is concerned that the proposed transaction would further entrench Google’s market position in the online advertising markets by increasing the already vast amount of data that Google could use for personalisation of the ads it serves and displays,” the regulator said.

The watchdog said it investigation should be complete by 9 December.

In response, the tech giant said it would cooperate with the process.

“We appreciate the opportunity to work with the European Commission on an approach that addresses consumers’ expectations of their wearable devices,” blogged Google’s devices chief Rick Osterloh.

Valuable data

California-based Fitbit helped pioneer the fitness tracker market, launching its first device in 2009. It now has about 30 million active users and has sold more than 100 million gadgets to date.

However, it currently ranks behind Apple, Xiaomi, Samsung and Huawei in terms of global shipments of wearable tech, according to market research firm IDC.

It posted a $132m (£101m) loss in its last annual results, alongside a sales figure that had declined for the fourth year in a row, despite the launch of its Versa 2 smartwatch.

Margrethe Vestager
Margrethe Vestager

Analysts suggested part of the attraction for Google was the fact that Fitbit had formed partnerships with several insurers in addition to a government health programme in Singapore.

While the European Commission has said its main concern is the “data advantage” Google will gain to serve increasingly personalised ads via its search page, it also said its investigation would look into:

  • the effects of the merger on Europe’s nascent digital healthcare sector

  • whether Google would have the means and ability to make it more difficult for rival wearables to work with its Android operating system.

For its part, Google has explicitly denied its motivation is to control more data.

“We believe the combination of Google and Fitbit’s hardware efforts will increase competition in the sector, making the next generation of devices better and more affordable,” wrote Mr Osterloh. 

“This deal is about devices, not data.

“We’ve been clear from the beginning that we will not use Fitbit health and wellness data for Google ads.”

The European Commission acknowledged this commitment, but said it was “insufficient to clearly dismiss” its concerns.

“The data silo remedy did not cover all the data that Google would access as a result of the transaction,” it added.

Data promises

One digital rights activist welcomed the intervention.

“Google and its parent company Alphabet already have unprecedented control over large parts of the digital world,” said Wolfie Christl from Cracked Labs, an Austrian research institute.

“They also want to take over digital health and insurance.

“Letting them acquire Fitbit without additional obligations would be a major step into this direction, and thus should not happen.”

The European Commission has reason to be wary of Google’s promise to restrict its use of Fitbit’s data.

Smart thermostat-maker Nest pledged to keep its user data separate from Google’s after it was acquired in 2014. But Google began asking users to let it merge the logs in 2019.

Other tech firms have also reneged on similar assurances.

Most notably, Facebook’s efforts to integrate WhatsApp with its other messaging services, despite the chat app having declared in 2014 that it would ” remain autonomous and operate independently”.

Anti-trust scrutiny

The European Commission has ruled against Google in three previous competition cases, concerning the company’s:

The regulator is also considering whether to launch a full-scale investigation into the firm’s jobs search tool.

Google also faces increased antitrust scrutiny in the US.

Its chief executive Sundar Pichai faced several claims of anticompetitive behaviour last week when he was quizzed by Congress, including claims that Google had too much control over the purchase and sale of online ads.

In addition, the Senate Judiciary Committee has said it plans its own hearing into Google’s “dominance in online advertising” on 15 September.

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