The European Commission conducted raids on data center builders, suspecting them of cartel conspiracies

The European Commission (EC) announced a series of unannounced inspections at the sites of companies involved in the construction of data centers. According to Datacenter Dynamics, the commission additionally sent formal requests to businesses to provide information that could shed light on possible cartel agreements.

Representatives of European authorities fear that companies may have agreed to enter into secret agreements stipulating the inadmissibility of poaching employees. In addition, agreements on establishing wages and other working conditions are not excluded. The European Commission does not disclose the names of the companies subject to inspections. Moreover, it is emphasized that preliminary checks do not necessarily mean that companies are definitely guilty of collusion.

Image source: Nebius

The raids on the companies were carried out in cooperation with the national antimonopoly departments of the European Union, but for now even information about which countries are being inspected is kept secret. Nothing is known about the time limit for the investigation, so there is no information about the duration of further raids, as well as how long it will take for new requests to be sent to the companies.

Representatives of the EU authorities said that any companies associated with cartel conspiracies can ease their fate by receiving immunity from fines or their significant reduction if they themselves report such conspiracies and cooperate with representatives of the European Commission during the investigation.

Not only companies, but also individuals have the opportunity to fulfill their civic duty. A special tool, the Whistleblower Tool, allows you to anonymously send encrypted messages to regulatory authorities to those wishing to become informants of the European Commission.

Company employees and other interested parties with knowledge of cartels and informal agreements related to preventing the poaching of employees or wage collusion can anonymously report violations to the authorities.

But while business is able to agree on some issues, there remains constant confrontation on others. At the end of September, Google Cloud filed a complaint with the European Commission about Microsoft’s anti-competitive licensing practices, and in October news emerged that the Open Cloud Coalition group would promote openness in the cloud market – Microsoft has already called it “an artificial turf created by Google.”

admin

Share
Published by
admin

Recent Posts

Assassin’s Creed Shadows is already in the hands of players, although the release is still almost a month away

Image source: Ubisoft Image source: Reddit (Ajxtt) Reddit summarized DannyStevens__'s impressions of the first 10…

5 hours ago

Telegram fined $600,000 for delaying counter-terrorism report

Australian internet regulator eSafety has fined the Telegram messenger 958 million Australian dollars (about $600,000).…

5 hours ago

Samsung Can’t Do Without China’s YMTC to Produce 400-Layer 3D NAND

Kioxia announced 332-layer 3D NAND this month, so Korea's SK hynix can't claim the record,…

5 hours ago

Samsung union wins 5.1% wage hike and bonuses for workers with biggest strike ever

Last July, Samsung Electronics faced its first strike in the company's history, with workers demanding…

5 hours ago

GeForce RTX 5080 also found defective chips with missing ROPs

Nvidia recently confirmed that some GeForce RTX 5090/RTX 5090D and RTX 5070 Ti graphics cards…

7 hours ago

HDDs with medical records of Dutch residents end up at a flea market

Although flea markets usually sell almost useless items, sometimes you can find real treasures there.…

8 hours ago