The appointment of Fiona Scott Morton, a former competition economist for the US Justice Department who has also lobbied on behalf of Apple, Amazon and Microsoft, has set off alarm bells in Brussels and Paris. Morton’s mandate would involve advising the EU Commission on investigations into alleged anti-competitive behaviour, proposed mergers, and the implementation of the landmark Digital Markets Act (DMA), the EU’s rulebook to rein in the market power of Big Tech firms.

    • Riddick3001
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      1 year ago

      It leaves me speechless.

      Agreed ( in retrospect not sure which lady you’re refering to, maybe both?)

      Fiona Scott Norton has hardly started her job, and there is already so much controversy about her.

      I don’t know anything about this person, but I can’t even start to magine what will submerge and happen, when something really sensitive and tough comes up ( like almost every thing that’s happening lately, GDPR, AI,etc).

      European Commission should take their losses, and revoke her application ASAP.

      #spelling

    • GataZapata
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      31 year ago

      Why are people so disillusioned by politics? Why do they believe all the conspiracy myths? Why does no one vote, and why do all the nazi party’s gain support? Why do so many people believe government is corrupt at all levfels and it doesn’t matter anyways? It is an eternal mystery

  • @[email protected]
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    -21 year ago

    Morton has been hailed an “antitrust warrior” for her critical stance on tech platforms, and previously claimed her side-gig consulting large firms, many of which have been targeted by EU anti-trust regulators, was important for her research and teaching.

    While I understand being critical of any appointment for such an important position, I find the overall online discussion around this rather one-sided.
    At the very least, she does seem to be quite qualified.

    Questioning her loyalties is a very hypothetical argument and let’s be honest, it’s not like other top EU bureaucrats are unbiased and completely objective in their roles.

    A more interesting and concrete argument I heard was that there seems to be a rule that EU officials must be recruited from the member states.
    Does anyone know if such a rule actually exists and if it applies to this position?
    If so, that would render all other discussion around this appointment obsolete.