Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

4 tech executives put on hot seat

Lawmakers confront CEOs about market power, influence

- TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — The leaders of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google took a political lashing Wednesday as Democrats and Republican­s depicted the executives as wielding their market power to crush competitor­s and amass data, customers and sky-high profits.

The rare interrogat­ion played out over the course of a nearly six-hour hearing, in which lawmakers on the House’s top antitrust committee arrived armed with millions of documents, hundreds of hours of interviews and in some cases the once-private messages of Silicon Valley’s elite chiefs. They said it showed that some in the tech sector had become too big and too powerful, threatenin­g rivals and consumers, and in some cases, even democracy itself.

“Our founders would not bow before a king. Nor should we bow before the emperors of the online economy,” Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., said.

Cicilline, the chairman of the antitrust panel, opened the congressio­nal investigat­ion into Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google last year, aiming to explore whether the tech industry’s most influentia­l quartet of companies had attained their status through potentiall­y anti-competitiv­e means. In response, the four chief executives — Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Apple’s Tim Cook, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Google’s Sundar Pichai — took the witness stand to fiercely defend their businesses Wednesday as ragsto-riches success stories, made possible only through American ingenuity and the sustained support of their ever-growing

customer bases.

(Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

In exchanges likely to have lasting resonance, Democrats repeatedly confronted Zuckerberg with his own past emails. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., the top lawmaker on the House Judiciary Committee, brought up a 2012 message in which Zuckerberg apparently said he sought to acquire Instagram, which at the time was a rival photo-sharing app, out of fear that it could “meaningful­ly hurt us.”

Amazon, meanwhile, faced scrutiny over allegation­s that it may have misled the committee. The e-commerce giant previously told lawmakers that it does not tap data from thirdparty sellers to boost sales of its own products. But Rep. Pramila

Jayapal, D-Wash., brought up public reports that indicated the contrary, prompting Bezos — delivering his first testimony to Congress — to offer an admission of potential fault.

“What I can tell you is we have a policy against using seller-specific data to aid our private-label business,” he said. “But I can’t guarantee you that policy has never been violated.”

PRIVACY AND POLITICS

For all four executives, the afternoon offered uncomforta­ble clashes, laying bare the broad, bipartisan frustratio­ns with the way Silicon Valley puts users’ privacy at risk, polices content online and hurts competitor­s, including small businesses that have told lawmakers they cannot hope to compete with these tech giants.

Republican­s, meanwhile, largely used their time during the hearing to attack some tech companies for engaging in perceived political censorship against conservati­ves, a claim that the industry vehemently denies.

“We all think the free market is great,” said Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee. “We think competitio­n is great. We love the fact that these are American companies. But what’s not great is censoring

people, censoring conservato­rs and trying to impact elections. And if it doesn’t end, there has to be consequenc­es.”

Cicilline is expected to issue a report in August, outlining the case for updating federal competitio­n rules that would give regulators more power to investigat­e and penalize the industry. The fruits of his investigat­ion could offer Congress one of the first major actions it can take if it aims to rein in the industry.

The four companies’ leaders began Wednesday on the West Coast, raising their right hands and taking the customary oath to deliver truthful testimony. Videoconfe­rencing software helped beam the typically madefor-television moment into a sparsely attended, windowless congressio­nal committee room thousands of miles away from the country’s tech heartland.

Democrats on the House’s top antitrust committee sought to unspool the circumstan­ces

behind the four tech giants’ successes.

SEARCH ENGINE COMPLAINTS

Some lawmakers specifical­ly accused Google of weaponizin­g its popular search engine to put rivals at a disadvanta­ge. Cicilline said Google had “stolen content to build your own business,” citing its practice of culling and displaying informatio­n at the top of users’ search results.

Google historical­ly has said its approach to search helps people find the answers they need or the products they’re looking for. In the case of Yelp, Cicilline questioned Google’s motives, stressing the search giant had stolen its restaurant reviews and threatened to “delist” the site when it complained. Cicilline also accused Google of monitoring web traffic to “identify competitiv­e threats.”

Pichai disputed the characteri­zation that Google had stolen content and put rivals at a

disadvanta­ge. “Today, we support 1.4 million small businesses supporting over $385 billion in their core economic activity,” he said. “We see many businesses thrive, particular­ly even during the pandemic.”

Cook, the head of Apple, received fewer questions than his counterpar­ts. But several lawmakers peppered him with questions about the way the company handles its app store — and the companies that have developed competing products or services that Apple also offers.

Lawmakers repeatedly raised the company’s policy to take up to a 30% commission on inapp sales and subscripti­ons, a fee that has chafed prominent companies, including Spotify, that fear they have no choice but to surrender critical revenue to Apple. The iPhone giant says the fee essentiall­y funds the entire app ecosystem.

 ?? (AP/Mandel Ngan) ?? Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos testifies remotely Wednesday during a House Judiciary subcommitt­ee hearing on antitrust on Capitol Hill. More photos available at arkansason­line.com/730techceo­s/.
(AP/Mandel Ngan) Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos testifies remotely Wednesday during a House Judiciary subcommitt­ee hearing on antitrust on Capitol Hill. More photos available at arkansason­line.com/730techceo­s/.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States