European Commission gives green light to Google’s Fitbit takeover

The European Commission has approved Googleās takeover of Fitbit following a four-month investigation.
Googleās parent company, Alphabet, announced it hadĀ acquired the wearables company in November 2019, with the deal worth about Ā£1.6billion ($2.1billion).
But the European Commission expressed concerns the merger would further enhance the tech giantās position in the online advertising markets and an investigation was launched in August 2020.
Google has made a series of commitments to address the Commissionās concerns, including that it will not use health and fitness data gathered by Fitbit for Google Ads.
The company will also āmaintain technical separationā from Fitbit data, which will be stored in a ādata siloā separate from any other Google data.
Third party access to the Fitbit platform will also be maintained.
Margrethe Vestager, European Commission executive vice-president, said: āWe can approve the proposed acquisition of Fitbit by Google because the commitments will ensure that the market for wearables and the nascent digital health space will remain open and competitive.
āThe commitments will determine how Google can use the data collected for ad purposes, how interoperability between competing wearables and Android will be safeguarded and how users can continue to share health and fitness data, if they choose to.ā
At the core of the Commissionās concerns were Googleās access to increasing levels of data, which could be used to personalise the adverts it displays.
The investigation also focused on the potential for Google to restrict competitors’ access to health and fitness data provided by Fitbit, which is currently available through a Web API.
The restrictions could come āat the detriment of start-ups in the nascent European digital healthcare spaceā, the Commission had warned.