Facebook has been fined £50m by the UK’s competition watchdog for deliberately refusing to comply with an investigation into its purchase of gif library Giphy.
Earlier this year the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched its inquiry into the acquisition, which took place last April, raising the prospect that Giphy would have to be sold again.
The concern was that Facebook could deny other platforms access to Giphy’s images, or change the terms of that access – citing as an example how the company could demand other customers such as TikTok, Twitter, and Snapchat share more user data about their users.
Now the CMA has fined Facebook for failing to provide the regulator with updates about how it is complying with an initial enforcement order designed to prevent the companies integrating further ahead of a potential order to decouple.
The CMA aid it was the first time a company had been found in breach of an enforcement order by “consciously refusing to report all the required information”.
Follow the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker
Facebook has separately been fined £500,000 for changing its chief compliance officer on two separate occasions without seeking the regulator’s consent first.
Facebook reportedly planning to rebrand the company with name change
Facebook plans to hire 10,000 people in Europe to build its metaverse
Obsession, reliance and regulation: Will Facebook be driven into obscurity?
Joel Bamford, the senior director of mergers at the CMA, said: “Initial enforcement orders are a key part of the UK’s voluntary merger control regime.
“Companies are not required to seek CMA approval before they complete an acquisition but, if they decide to go ahead with a merger, we can stop the companies from integrating further if we think consumers might be affected and an investigation is needed.
“We warned Facebook that its refusal to provide us with important information was a breach of the order but, even after losing its appeal in two separate courts, Facebook continued to disregard its legal obligations.
“This should serve as a warning to any company that thinks it is above the law,” Mr Bamford added.
The CMA’s investigation into Facebook’s merger with Giphy is ongoing, the regulator said, adding that no decision has yet been reached regarding it.
A spokesperson for Facebook responded: “We strongly disagree with the CMA’s unfair decision to punish Facebook for a best effort compliance approach, which the CMA itself ultimately approved.
The company complained that the CMA hasn’t explained how it arrived at a fine of £50m and noted that the regulator’s previous largest fine was for just £325,000.
Facebook argues that it had been in compliance with the CMA’s primary orders at all times.
It complains that the regulator delayed for seven months a request to amend these orders which was eventually agreed in what the company described as nearly an identical manner to what had been requested.
The spokesperson added: “We will review the CMA’s decision and consider our options.”