EU targets Amazon, Microsoft cloud units for Big Tech “gatekeeper” rules


The logo of Amazon is seen at the company's logistics center in Bretigny-sur-Orge, near Paris, France, November 28, 2025. REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq

BRUSSELS, June 25 (Reuters) - ⁠EU antitrust regulators said Amazon and Microsoft's cloud computing services should be designated ⁠as “gatekeepers” under landmark tech rules, a step that would subject them to ‌strict obligations aimed at curbing market power.

The designation under the Digital Markets Act would impose a set of obligations and bans on the world's two largest cloud providers, Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, including limits on ​self-preferencing and requirements to ensure interoperability and data portability.

So far, ⁠EU regulators have targeted core platform ⁠services such as search, social media and app stores to rein in Big Tech. Extending ⁠the ‌DMA to cloud infrastructure would mark a significant expansion into a sector seen as critical to AI.

The preliminary findings follow a seven-month long investigation.

"Cloud services have become ⁠a cornerstone of Europe’s economy - and a prerequisite for AI - ​with over half of EU ‌businesses now relying on them, combined with record investment in public cloud infrastructure," ⁠EU tech chief ​Henna Virkkunen said in a statement.

"Given their central role in Europe's digital future, these services must operate in fair, open and competitive markets that foster trust and secure Europe’s tech sovereignty."

Amazon said the assessment ⁠disregards the breadthof cloud services available to European customersandrisks ​deterringEuropeaninvestment and innovation.

"The EU already has comprehensive cloud regulation through the Data Act, and adding another heavy layer of overlapping regulation under the DMA undermines European competitiveness and access to cutting-edge ⁠information technology," an AWS spokesperson said.

Microsoft pointed to its rival Google's growing power.

"We remain concerned that ignoring the growing power of Google Cloud and Gemini will tilt the market in a harmful way," a Microsoft spokesperson said.

The Commission singled out AWS and Microsoft Azure's significant turnover, ​bigger operational capacity and investments than rivals, vast and entrenched ⁠user bases and lock-in effects and high switching costs.

The EU competition enforcer also cited the two ​services' AI tools and partnerships as a decisive factor ‌in cloud procurement.

Amazon and Microsoft can now seek ​to counter the Commission's preliminary findings before the regulator issues a final decision in the coming months.

(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee;Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Elaine Hardcastle)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

EU joins U.S.-led 'Pax Silica' on securing AI, chip supply chains
BlackBerry lifts annual revenue forecast as QNX unit powers growth
IndiaMART doubles down on AI to curb fake listings, improve buyer interaction
Canadian workers have few protections against workplace surveillance as TD starts monitoring
IBM unveils tech for chip smaller than 1 nanometer in AI computing push
WhatsApp's pick of Indian fintech founder signals scale of payment ambitions
The theatre chain asking moviegoers to use their phones
Amazon to invest additional $13 billion in India cloud, AI
Their phones were stolen in London. Then the threats started
Hundreds of fake FIFA World Cup scammer websites detected by Kaspersky

Others Also Read