
The European Commission has designated Booking Holdings, the U.S. company behind the popular travel service platform Booking.com, as a 'gatekeeper' under the Digital Markets Act (DMA). This designation subjects Booking to stringent EU obligations aimed at curbing market power and ensuring fair competition. Ironically, Booking had previously lobbied for the DMA, seeking advantages over competitors like Google. Now, Booking finds itself bound by the same rules it advocated for, with six months to comply and a requirement to submit a detailed compliance report. Additionally, the European Commission has launched an investigation into the social media network X to assess its regulatory status under the same act.















The European Commission said it had designated Booking dotcom as a 'gatekeeper,' and has opened an investigation into social media network X. Online advertising services X Ads and TikTok Ads did not qualify as gatekeepers under the EU Digital Markets Act https://t.co/ywiwh7zbNI https://t.co/7GjjfuT5Rn
https://t.co/DbHk5QFATR’s parent company is officially a gatekeeper, EU monopoly watchdog says. https://t.co/aFIdTMW1AQ
The European Commission has designated https://t.co/FR47qgSD1i a "gatekeeper" between businesses and consumers, meaning it must comply with strict tech rules. It has yet to decide if the same applies to Elon Musk's X social platform. https://t.co/uOMmPK0ulO