Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Facebook and Google face another costly battle

EU’s view is that free social media is not a public good if its business model hoovers up user data without consent

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For many people, it probably sounds a little rich to hear the European Union (EU) accuse Silicon Valley of being a graveyard of innovation. But that’s where we are in 2019. Regulators are hitting the likes of Alphabet Inc’s Google and Facebook Inc with a flurry of antitrust fines and data-privacy probes, implying that they regard tech billionair­es as more John D Rockefelle­r than Nikola Tesla.

The endgame, according to Brussels’ top data watchdog, is to make sure new startups aren’t blown out of the water by Big Tech (or gobbled up), which should ultimately benefit consumers by allowing them more choice.

Tackling this so-called “kill zone,” where fledgling tech companies are acquired or copied out of existence by deep-pocketed incumbents, is a prime ambition for European Data Protection Supervisor Giovanni Buttarelli, nicknamed Mr GDPR after the data-privacy law.

When I met him in Brussels recently, Buttarelli checked off the barriers to entry for a startup: It needs to first outbid the likes of Amazon.com Inc, Facebook and others for engineerin­g talent; then sell its product through an app store probably run by Google or Apple Inc; and finally compete against big players with establishe­d networks and huge cash piles. And even it clears all these hurdles, it’s still vulnerable to being taken out.

There’s a connection between this dominance of Big Tech — which is proven by the decline in venture-capital financing for upstarts, as my colleague Noah Smith has written — and harm to consumers. The EU view is that the “free” price tag of social media and apps is not a public good if it’s underpinne­d by a business model that hoovers up data from users without consent.

And if the profits from that are spent on blocking competitio­n, there’s less chance of a market-based alternativ­e. Google and Facebook rebut this view, insisting that a disruptive rival could unseat them anytime. But regulators have given up waiting for one.

The recipe for fixing things, according to Buttarelli, is threefold. He wants more competitio­n through antitrust enforcemen­t, more data protection through GDPR, and more fairness and transparen­cy for customers from the tech giants themselves.

None of this would destroy Facebook or Google. GDPR is estimated to have inflicted a negative impact of 2-3% on the two companies’ total ad revenues, according to Bank of America analyst Justin Post. The running total of EU antitrust fines against Google is about 6.7 billion euros ($7.5 billion), while the company’s yearly sales are more than $100 billion. Still, Eric Leandri, co-founder of French search engine Qwant, says he’s confident that fines against Google on competitio­n and data-privacy grounds – which the US firm is appealing – will have a chilling impact.

Defenders of the Silicon Valley faith will grumble about mission creep in Brussels. It’s true that regulators need to be careful not to muddy the waters with inconsiste­nt regulation. The recent German competitio­n ruling against Facebook uses data privacy as its main argument, but without a prior ruling on GDPR infringeme­nt.

That’s a problem because it’s hard to separate the need to enforce user privacy with the need to safeguard competitio­n. Imagine the right to keep your data private under one law alongside the need to share your data in a competitiv­e market under another.

Another thing not covered in Buttarelli’s plan is where investment comes from. It was no surprise when Sweden’s music-streaming giant Spotify Technology SA decided to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange last year. If Europe fails to unify its fragmented capital markets, especially after Brexit, the fruits of Buttarelli’s labour will end up in America regardless.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg answers questions about the improper use of users’ data by a political consultanc­y, at the European Parliament, Brussels, May 22, 2018
REUTERS Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg answers questions about the improper use of users’ data by a political consultanc­y, at the European Parliament, Brussels, May 22, 2018

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