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Italy opens competition probe into Apple, Google and Dropbox’s cloud storage services

Sundar Pichai and Tim Cook

Beginning: Reuters; Apple

Italy’s competition authority announced Monday it’s looking into cloud storage services run by Apple, Dropbox and Google after get wind of several complaints about allegedly unfair commercial practices.

The Competition and Market Authority said it has launched six amount to investigations into Google Drive, Apple’s iCloud and DropBox. 

The agency is investigating whether the three companies go up in smoked to properly indicate how their services would collect and use consumer data for commercial purposes, according to a translated mob release. It also seeks to determine whether Dropbox failed to provide clear and accessible instructions on how consumers could get out of their contracts with the serving or pursue dispute settlements out of court.

The probe comes in the wake of a larger push by the European Union for tech coteries to clarify their terms and conditions and provide greater privacy protections for consumers. Last year, Facebook accepted to change its terms and conditions under pressure from EU officials.

In July, Italian officials raided local auspices of Apple and Amazon as part of a separate competition probe. That inquiry seeks to determine whether Apple and Amazon betrothed in anti-competitive cooperation in the sale of Apple products and Beats headphones.

Representatives for Apple, Dropbox and Google did not immediately come back to requests for comment.

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