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7 J. Eur. Consumer & Mkt. L. 1 (2018)

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                                          Journal of


 European Consumer and Market Law

                                        EuCML 1/2018          Volume 7
                                     15 February 2018         Pages 1 -48
Editors: Prof. Dr. Christoph Busch, Universitat Osnabruck  Dr. Alberto De Franceschi, Universiti degli Studi di Ferrara  Dr. Mateja
Durovic, King's College London  Dr. Joasia Luzak, University of Exeter  Prof. Dr. Vanessa Mak, Tilburg University  Prof. Dr. Jorge
Morais Carvalho, Universidade Nova de Lisboa  Dr. Kristin Nemeth, Universitdt Innsbruck  Prof. Dr. Rupprecht Podszun, Heinrich-Heine-
Universitdt Duisseldorf Dr. Christine Riefa, Brunel University London
EMail: editors@ eucml.eu






                                                   Editorial


                    Uber Spain and the Identity Crisis of Online Platforms

      Business models like Uber, Amazon and Airbnb have struggled since their inception with a question
      that impacts on the equilibrium of the EU digital market: should they be qualified as mere intermedi-
      aries or rather as providers of goods and services?
      Most platforms present themselves as mere passive facilitators rather than as sellers or suppliers.'
      This is, for instance, the case of Uber2 and Airbnb,3 which repeatedly point out in their terms and
      conditions that they act as mere intermediaries between the service provider and the recipient. Never-
      theless, such platforms are often much more than mere facilitators between the supplier and the user
      of goods, digital content or services, as many of them determine the terms and conditions, the price,
      manage the payment service, often taking a percentage as a processing fee. Other platforms play an
      even more active role, such as platforms dealing with 3D printing. They allow designers to publish
      their works (i. e. their CAD files) on the platform, where interested recipients can order the physical
      item. The online platform will then process the order, 3D print the item and dispatch it directly to the
      recipient.4
      Already in its Communication on a European agenda for the collaborative economy of June 2016,5
      the EU Commission underlined that whether an online platform also provides the underlying service
      has to be established on a case-by-case basis. In this regard, several factual and legal criteria play a
      role, indicating the level of control or influence that the collaborative platform exerts over the
      provider of such services. According to the Commission's reasoning, the key criteria to be considered
      are: (i) the circumstance that the collaborative platform sets the final price to be paid by the user; (ii)
      the fact that the platform sets other key contractual terms; and (iii) the fact that the platform owns
      the key assets used to provide the underlying service.6

      1   C. Busch, H. Schulte-N61ke, A. Wiewi6rowska-Domagalska and F. Zoll, The rise of the platform economy: A new challenge for EU
          consumer law?, EuCML 2016, 3 ff.
      2   M.J. Sorensen, Private law perspectives on platform services: Uber - a business model in search of a new contractual legal frame?,
          EuCML 2016, 15 ff. Cf. the reports from 13 EU-Member States published in EuCML issues 1-2/2015, 3/2015 and 4/2015.
      3   V. Mak, Private law perspectives on platform services: Airbnb - Home rentals between AYOR and NIMBY, EuCML 2016, 19 ff.
      4   C. Twigg-Flesner, Disruptive Technology - Disrupted Law? How the Digital Revolution Affects (Contract) Law, in A. De Franceschi
          (ed.), European Contract Law and the Digital Single Market - The Implications of the Digital Revolution, Intersentia 2016, 30.
      5   COM(2016) 356 final. See C. Cauffman, The Commission's European Agenda for the Collaborative Economy - (Too) Platform and
          Service Provider Friendly?, EuCML 2016, 238; G. Smorto, Critical Assessment of European Agenda for the Collaborative Economy -
          In-Depth Analysis for the IMCO Committee, 2017, 5, 18; K. Tonner, Verbraucherschutz in der Plattform-Okonomie, VuR 2017, 162.
      6   COM(2016) 356 final, 6. See K. Tonner, supra note 5, 162, who makes an interesting reference to Directive 2015/2302 of the
          European Parliament and of the Council of 25 November 2015 on package travel and linked travel arrangements.

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