Meta tests eBay listings in Facebook Marketplace to resolve EU charges

Meta said Wednesday that it will allow some Facebook users to view eBay listings on its Marketplace service, as it tries out a possible way to resolve European Union charges of anticompetitive behavior that the bloc leveled last year.

The social media company said it’s launching a test that will let Facebook users in Germany, France and the U.S. browse eBay listings directly on its Marketplace online classifieds service but complete the transaction on eBay.

Meta is carrying out the trial after Brussels slapped the company in November with a penalty of nearly 800 million euros ($824 million) for what it called “abusive practices” involving Marketplace.

European Union antitrust enforcers accused Meta of illegally shutting out competition by tying Marketplace to its social network and automatically exposing Facebook users to Marketplace whether or not they wanted it. They also accused Meta of gaining an unfair advantage through ad-related data.

“While we disagree with and continue to appeal the European Commission’s decision on Facebook Marketplace, we are working quickly and constructively to build a solution which addresses the points raised,” Meta said in a blog post, adding that its solution could benefit people on both platforms.

The European Commission, the 27-nation bloc’s top antitrust enforcer, said it had “no specific comment,” saying only that Meta must comply with the decision issued in mid-November within 90 days.

Shares of eBay jumped on the news. The company said that starting Wednesday a “select number of eBay listings” in the three countries “will be seamlessly integrated and viewable on Facebook Marketplace.” The listings will be from a “variety of categories,” based on factors including shopping trends and listing quality, it said, without being more specific.

Buyers will complete their transactions following the same process as they would when buying directly through the eBay website and will be covered by the platform’s money-back guarantee and other protections, it said.

—Kelvin Chan, AP business writer

https://www.fastcompany.com/91257103/meta-tests-ebay-listings-facebook-marketplace-eu-charges?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 8mo | 8 janv. 2025, 19:20:07


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

How ESPN finally made the leap from cable TV to the app era

CEOs rarely talk about plans that are a half-decade or more away from reaching reality. Yet way back in 2015, Disney CEO Robert Iger

21 août 2025, 18:40:16 | Fast company - tech
Historian Mar Hicks on why nothing about AI is inevitable

AI usage has been deemed by some to be an inevitablity. Many recent he

21 août 2025, 16:30:12 | Fast company - tech
New cellphone restrictions in school begin for students in 17 states

Jamel Bishop is seeing a big change in his classrooms as he begins his senior year at Doss High School in Louisville, Kentucky, where

21 août 2025, 16:30:10 | Fast company - tech
China weighs expanding digital currencies globally with a yuan stablecoin

China has been expanding the use of digital currencies as it promotes wider use of its yuan, or renminbi, to reflect its status as the world’s second-largest economy and challenge the overwh

21 août 2025, 16:30:09 | Fast company - tech
Democrats are teaching candidates how to use AI to win elections

Welcome to AI DecodedFast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most imp

21 août 2025, 16:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Google did the math on AI’s energy footprint

Ever wonder how much energy it takes when you ask an AI to draft an em

21 août 2025, 14:10:08 | Fast company - tech
Sweetgreen’s sour summer

It’s one of the great questions of our modern age: How does Sweetgreen lose money selling $14 (and up!) fast casual salads and bowls? And not just a little money but $442 million in the last three

21 août 2025, 14:10:06 | Fast company - tech