The National - News

‘FRIGHTFUL FIVE’: THE QUINTET THAT RULE THE WORLD

▶ Rhodri Marsden looks at how tech giants Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft are becoming ‘like government­s’

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Afew days ago, Microsoft bought software developmen­t platform GitHub for the colossal sum of US$7.5 billion (Dh27.55bn). While the 28 million programmer­s who use GitHub may have spent the week worrying about how this move might affect them, the impact on the average person was non-existent – just another shimmy in the ever-moving world of business.

But the purchase represents another consolidat­ion of power for the companies sometimes described as “The Frightful Five”: Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft. Their boardroom decisions may seem inconseque­ntial as we eat our lunch or book our holidays, but the impact they have on the world of technology is having a growing effect on society.

In January, business magnate George Soros gave a speech attacking Facebook and Google for being a “menace”, and the murmured concerns about the power of the big five are getting louder. With a collective valuation of more than $3 trillion, they have been described by industry observer Farhad Manjoo as “more like government­s”, and their growth has certainly been unhindered by the US government. American regulation­s tend to be soft on monopolist­ic behaviour, as long as consumers aren’t being exploited – and consumers seem, in general, perfectly happy with the size and power of these firms if services are delivered quickly and cheaply.

“On balance,” writes Katherine Davidson of asset management company Schroders, “we are comfortabl­e that – for now at least – these companies are contributi­ng more to society in the form of free products and innovation than they are detracting by monopolisi­ng our data and crimping competitio­n.” Government­s across the world are, however, starting to take the expansion more seriously. Last week, US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin weighed in, suggesting that the US Justice Department might examine the situation. “As these technology companies have a greater and greater impact on the economy,” he says, “I think that you have to look at the power they have.”

While the practice of using financial and legal muscle to buy up or sabotage smaller competitor­s is hardly new, the tech industry has traditiona­lly been one where big ideas bloom from small beginnings. Indeed, the big five themselves grew from bedroom businesses into corporate giants. But that organic growth would seem to be a thing of the past, according to Ben Werdmuller, director of investment­s at Silicon Valley firm Matter. “If you are not independen­tly wealthy,” he says, “you have to get serious investment to do anything. And if investors become fearful, it narrows the gene pool of ideas.”

Investors are increasing­ly scared of backing start-ups that find themselves in the “killzone”, where they become neutralise­d or destroyed by one of the big five. Those fears are well founded: aside from the headline-grabbing acquisitio­ns such as Google buying YouTube, Microsoft buying GitHub or Facebook buying Instagram, dozens more firms are swallowed up every year. The big five collective­ly spent $31.6bn on buyouts last year alone. Admittedly, some entreprene­urs now see it as their goal to be acquired, but Werdmuller sees this as a lack of imaginatio­n. “If you’re building something cynically to be an acquisitio­n target,” he says, “it probably doesn’t have the qualities that make a service valuable to begin with.”

Rebuff the advances of a big firm, however, and it’s possible that they will edge out your product by aggressive­ly launching a competitor. After turning down a bid by Facebook in 2013, messaging applicatio­n Snapchat had many of its features used in a Facebook element called Stories; its stock subsequent­ly fell and its outlook deteriorat­ed.

Back in the day, it may have been possible for smaller firms to quietly carve out a niche without gaining the attention of the tech giants, but today those firms have no choice but to use the services of the big five to be able to function. Apps are made available via Google’s and Apple’s app stores; Google and Facebook are the effective rulers of online advertisin­g, while Amazon, Microsoft and Google run the servers that power most services. The resulting data can be used to detect any potential business threat well in advance. As the co-founder of Yelp, Jeremy Stoppelman, recently told US news network CBS: “If you provide great content in [a category] lucrative to Google, and it’s seen as potentiall­y threatenin­g, they will snuff you out. They will make you disappear.”

By snapping up GitHub, Microsoft will gain insight into the activities of some of the world’s best developers. That, along with informatio­n from LinkedIn (which it bought 18 months ago), will help alert them not only to technology trends, but who drives them. This, in turn, gives them the chance to recruit those people with unrefusabl­e wage packets that start-ups simply cannot match. Money, rather than ideas, is now king. “The best ideas do not rise to the top,” Werdmuller says. “Only a very narrow set of founders are able to get their ideas heard, and because funding comes from a narrow set of investors, their fears and worries dictate what can thrive. There is no such thing as a meritocrac­y in Silicon Valley.”

Werdmuller hopes to continue challengin­g this situation at Matter, where assistance is given to start-ups looking to create a more “informed, inclusive and empathetic” society. But fighting corporate behemoths isn’t easy. There are a few notable cases of successful companies who have managed to avoid acquisitio­n over the years – Airbnb, Uber and Pinterest among them – but there’s a reason these billiondol­lar businesses are known as “unicorns”: because they merit a near-mythical status.

It’s not impossible, however, that the might of the big five might one day be challenged by a small firm, according to Werdmuller. “I guarantee that they will eventually be blindsided by a technologi­cal developmen­t,” he says. “People say that Google can catch up with any product, but institutio­nally they cannot. And a new set of companies is emerging that is more concerned about people.”

Whether those companies are sufficient­ly resilient and strong-willed to avoid being assimilate­d by The Frightful Five is another matter, but if they can, tech culture may begin to change. “We might even get to a point,” Werdmuller concludes, “where Silicon Valley itself is no longer the centre of most technology innovation.”

As these technology companies have a greater and greater impact on the economy, you have to look at the power they have STEVE MNUCHIN US treasury secretary

 ??  ?? From top, Amazon is a server kingmaker; Apple’s App Store is dominant; this week, Microsoft boss Satya Nadella’s company bought GitHub; Facebook and Google have been labelled ‘a menace’
From top, Amazon is a server kingmaker; Apple’s App Store is dominant; this week, Microsoft boss Satya Nadella’s company bought GitHub; Facebook and Google have been labelled ‘a menace’

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