The Jerusalem Post

Top start-up investors see mounting ‘backlash’ against tech

- • By HEATHER SOMERVILLE

LAGUNA BEACH, California (Reuters) – Two of the technology industry’s top start-up investors took to the stage at a conference last week to decry the power that companies such as Facebook Inc. had amassed and call for a redistribu­tion of wealth.

Bill Maris, who founded Alphabet Inc.’s venture-capital arm and now runs venture fund Section 32, and Sam Altman, president of start-up accelerato­r Y Combinator, said widespread discontent over income inequality helped elect US President Donald Trump and had put wealthy technology companies in the crosshairs.

“I do know that the tech backlash is going to be strong,” Altman said. “We have more and more concentrat­ed power and wealth.”

The market capitaliza­tion of the so-called Big Five technology companies – Alphabet, Apple Inc., Amazon Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Facebook – has doubled in the last three years to more than $3 trillion. Silicon Valley broadly has amassed significan­t wealth during the latest tech boom.

Altman and Maris spoke at The Wall Street Journal DLive technology conference in Southern California.

Facebook’s role in facilitati­ng what US intelligen­ce agencies have identified as Russian interferen­ce in last year’s US presidenti­al election is an example of the immense power the social-media company has amassed, the investors said.

“The companies that used to be fun and disruptive and interestin­g and benevolent are now disrupting our elections,” Maris said.

Altman said people “are understand­ably uncomforta­ble with that.”

Altman, who unequivoca­lly rebuffed rumors that he would run for governor of California next year, said he expects more demands from both the public and policy makers on data privacy, limiting what personal informatio­n Facebook and others can collect.

Maris said regulators would have good cause to break up the big technology companies.

“These companies are more powerful than AT&T ever was,” he said.

Facebook said last month it had discovered an operation likely based in Russia that spent $100,000 on political ads and created 470 fake accounts and pages that spread polarizing views on political and social issues.

Altman and Maris offered few details of how to accomplish a redistribu­tion of wealth. Maris proposed shorter term limits for elected officials and simplifyin­g the tax code. Altman has advocated basic income, a poverty-fighting proposal in which all residents would receive a regular, unconditio­nal sum of money from the government.

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