The logo of on-line retailer Amazon outside a distribution centre in
Saran, central France. A French court has fined the retailing giant $4.4
million over marketplace clauses. PHOTO | GUILLAUME SOUVANT | AFP
A French court has fined the US retailing giant Amazon four
million euros ($4.4 million) over terms of use deemed unfair for
companies using its online marketplace to sell their goods.
"It's
a record fine" for a suit involving abusive commercial clauses, Loic
Tanguy, a director at the DGCCRF, France's consumer and anti-fraud
watchdog, told AFP on Wednesday.
The agency filed its
lawsuit in 2017 after a two-year investigation into third-party vendor
platforms, which found several clauses potentially unfair to the 10,000
small and midsize French companies selling on Amazon.
They
gave Amazon the power to modify contracts at a moment's notice, demand
shorter delivery times or block deliveries while demanding additional
corporate information from vendors.
Tanguy said Amazon was the only online vendor who refused to modify its terms of use after the investigation.
Despite
the obvious advantages for companies using Amazon, Tanguy said, the
"asymmetrical balance of power" must not force vendors to accept unfair
terms of use.
In its ruling, first reported by a French online news site
Tuesday, the court found the contested clauses "manifestly unbalanced"
and ordered Amazon to change them within six months.
It said Amazon's marketplace generated around 60 per cent of the company's five billion euros of Amazon's total French sales.
"The
court ruled on a limited number of clauses, most of which were already
updated earlier this year," Amazon France told AFP late Tuesday.
Online
marketplaces like Amazon have been a boon for small and midsize French
firms, in particular for finding new export markets, with their total
foreign sales rising to 350 million euros last year, according to the
DGCCRF.
"The development of the digital economy is a
tremendous opportunity, as long as the big marketplaces respect
competition and consumer protection rules," Finance Minister Bruno Le
Maire said Wednesday on Twitter.
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