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DroidKnight said:
Ryuu96 said:

France's antitrust regulator, Autorité de la Concurrence, announced on Wednesday that it has imposed a fine of 13.5 million euros ($14.8 million) on Japanese tech giant Sony. The penalty was levied for what the regulatory body described as the abuse of Sony's dominant position in the market for the supply of video game controllers for PlayStation 4 (PS4).

The antitrust investigation revealed two primary infractions committed by Sony, leading to a significant fine. Firstly, the Japanese company implemented technical measures in November 2015 to combat counterfeiting, which inadvertently affected the proper functioning of third-party game controllers produced without an official Sony license. According to the regulator, third-party controllers faced regular disconnections during console operating system updates due to Sony's measures, which were deemed disproportionate.

The antitrust authority found Sony's actions indiscriminate, affecting all "unlicensed" controllers without distinction. This move was considered detrimental to third-party manufacturers, significantly tarnishing their brand image and hindering their expansion in the market.

Moreover, the antitrust body highlighted a lack of transparency in Sony's licensing policy. Rival companies were reportedly impeded from joining the licensing program, with access only granted through Sony's partnership program. The regulatory authority uncovered that Sony refused to communicate the program access criteria to manufacturers upon request, alleging that the criteria were applied at Sony's discretion.

"Sony applied the criteria in a discretionary manner, even though access to the program was the only way to avoid disconnections," the Autorité de la Concurrence stated in their announcement.

French Watchdog Hits Sony with €13.5M Fine for PS4 Controller Practices

This is obviously Sony news but it's exactly what Microsoft did this year so...

France is coming for you, Microsoft.

13m won't be enough to make Microsoft reverse course though...

Wasn't Microsoft being more selective in the devices they were targeting?  More of a means to combat customized cheating devices rather than attacking 3rd party controller developers as a whole?

I don't believe so, I think all unlicensed 3rd party controllers were fucked. At the time of Microsoft announcing this decision I thought to myself "I swear Sony did this as well" but couldn't find the evidence, despite people telling me only Microsoft did this, Lol. Idas seems to think they're similar enough that France may come for Microsoft next.

"Japanese company implemented technical measures in November 2015 to combat counterfeiting, which inadvertently affected the proper functioning of third-party game controllers produced without an official Sony license."

You can pretty much change this wording to...

"American company implemented technical measures in October 2023 to combat (?), which inadvertently affected the proper functioning of third-party game controllers produced without an official Xbox license"

This would apply to Microsoft as well, as all "unlicensed" controllers now no longer work, do they not?

"The antitrust authority found Sony's actions indiscriminate, affecting all "unlicensed" controllers without distinction."

This part may be where the two differ.

Moreover, the antitrust body highlighted a lack of transparency in Sony's licensing policy. Rival companies were reportedly impeded from joining the licensing program, with access only granted through Sony's partnership program. The regulatory authority uncovered that Sony refused to communicate the program access criteria to manufacturers upon request, alleging that the criteria were applied at Sony's discretion.

Only cause we don't know, Microsoft's licensing policy may be more transparent than Sony's it's not certain Microsoft will be hit on that count.

Still...I think Microsoft is going to get a fine too but they'll laugh at a $14m fine, Lol.