UK Prepares Antitrust Probe Into Facebook

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Antitrust probes into Facebook appear to be increasing on both sides of the Atlantic.

Earlier this week, Rep. Ken Buck, the top Republican on the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee, said during an antitrust hearing that "Apple, Google, Facebook, and Amazon have reached monopoly status, and their behavior won't change until Congress acts, the enforcement agencies do their job, and the courts move quickly to rein in their predatory conduct."


On Friday, sources told FT that the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is preparing an antitrust investigation into Facebook within the coming months, which is the latest crackdown on Silicon Valley's big tech dominance. Similar probes were launched into Apple and Google earlier this year.

Sources said CMA "would take a sweeping look at the way Facebook allegedly uses customer data to squash rivals in social media and online advertising."

CMA's potential investigation into Facebook comes as the government agency recently announced inquiries into Apple's App Store fees and Google's privacy settings.


CMA expects to follow European Union's antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager's investigation into Facebook, launched in December. She told lawmakers in Brussels how big tech is increasingly facing more stringent scrutiny around the world.
"It's a sign that the debate on tech dominance has been shifting over the last couple of years," Vestager said of the US antitrust move.
A person close to the CMA said the focus of the upcoming investigation would be on the social media platform's digital advertising.

Andrea Coscelli, the CMA's chief executive, vowed to take on Facebook and other big tech companies with a series of antitrust cases. He'll be working with lawmakers in Brussels to combat big tech.

Meanwhile, in the US, Facebook requested a federal judge earlier this month to dismiss landmark antitrust suits against it, claiming that its "innovative free products deliver value" is helpful to users, adding there's no evidence whatsoever of anti-competitively.

The Federal Trade Commission and almost every state have filed lawsuits against the social media platform for its market power abuse after acquiring Instagram and WhatsApp.

A source inside the CMA said: "The CMA cannot reverse past mergers . . . Becoming a monopolist is not against the law, it's whether [companies] abuse that position once [they] have it."
 
oh boy that 50 million dollar fine is going to take so much from their 1 trillion dollar profit!
 
oh boy that 50 million dollar fine is going to take so much from their 1 trillion dollar profit!
It's not (completely) about the money. Remember when that african country banned twitter because they were fucking with their elections? Twitter threw a bitchfit at that but not the fact their banning of Trump left them 5 billion dollars poorer.

Losing power over public opinion and control over the narratives is what will ultimately take these sons of bitches down. First slowly then suddenly. Sadly given how much power they have, this won't get far.
 
It's not (completely) about the money. Remember when that african country banned twitter because they were fucking with their elections? Twitter threw a bitchfit at that but not the fact their banning of Trump left them 5 billion dollars poorer.

Losing power over public opinion and control over the narratives is what will ultimately take these sons of bitches down. First slowly then suddenly. Sadly given how much power they have, this won't get far.
All of this is correct.

CNN et. al are operated deep in the red because their owners don't want to lose their ability to shape public opinion.
 
It's not (completely) about the money. Remember when that african country banned twitter because they were fucking with their elections? Twitter threw a bitchfit at that but not the fact their banning of Trump left them 5 billion dollars poorer.

Losing power over public opinion and control over the narratives is what will ultimately take these sons of bitches down. First slowly then suddenly. Sadly given how much power they have, this won't get far.
This is correct but is the UK govt going to willingly sever the link to one of the biggest public spying operations in history? Not even their shit investigatory powers bills can see actual human conversation.
 
The UK government which, right or left, has always exhibited strong authoritarian leanings, is engaging in some post-Brexit flexing against the new autocrats in waiting.

The winners? Possibly the VPN companies.
 
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