East Bay Times

It's well past time for the U.S. to pull in the reins of Big Tech

- By Jane Hoffman Jane Hoffman is the author of “Your Data, Their Billions: Unraveling and Simplifyin­g Big Tech.” © 2023 Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Every day, the $6.7 trillion Big Tech industry affects our lives in ways that empower and harm. Despite recent hits in earnings, current layoffs and Google getting slapped with yet another lawsuit from the Justice Department, the tech giants are still allpowerfu­l in our society, economy and daily lives. They remain among the most valuable companies in the world and are enjoying billions of dollars in profits. As long as the digital age keeps pulling more of our lives online, Big Tech companies will grow and dominate.

The big five — Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft and Apple — have become so large that they rule the marketplac­e on their own terms. As a result, smaller companies and consumers lose out, and innovation is stifled. Our online behavior is tracked across the internet and sold as data and toxic misinforma­tion that threatens lives and democracy.

Too much is at stake to keep waiting for Washington to grind out a regulation or two. The digital ecosystem has redefined our identities and place in society. We used to consider ourselves citizens, but in today's digital world, that's naive. First and foremost, we are data.

Some lawmakers propose breaking up these monopolies and drafting new regulation­s. If and when we follow through with these actions, we'll start catching up with the internatio­nal community's efforts to rein in Big Tech's abuses. For example, in December, the European Union adopted a new minimum tax rate of 15% for large corporatio­ns operating in the EU, following the G-20's guidelines. The trend is to make the biggest companies in the world — Big Tech — start paying up like everyone else.

If the global tech tax becomes reality, how should those new tax dollars be spent? Since the profits being taxed are largely made off our personal data, which Facebook, Google and others use to sell to advertiser­s, it's time for the people behind that data to get a piece. Let's share that tax windfall with the billions of online users whose data is the bedrock of the digital advertisin­g business model. For all the privacy that users give up, not to mention the mind games these companies play on us to steer our behavior, it's only fair that they toss us some change from their colossal profits. Every American should receive a data dividend if they earn under $175,000 annually.

Digital platform fairness can emerge in other ways, too, if we create a system for it.

Our best efforts in taming the Big Tech free-for-all would be well spent creating a national board packed with a wide range of experts to address Big Tech's overreach. Getting tech right for consumers and the economy is all about fairness, and a Technology Fairness Commission could bring together the country's leading tech experts such as industry insiders, academics, elected officials, consumer advocates, futurists, legal scholars, privacy and free speech advocates, and top journalist­s on the tech beat to untangle these challenges.

With a focus on how to transform the Wild West digital marketplac­e into a fair-for-all network, these top tech minds could provide the guidelines lawmakers need to create doable, sensible and effective regulation.

There's more at stake than getting annoyed by ads that seem to read your mind. (They're actually reading the trail of clicks you make every second you're online.) The click-forprofit business model that controls what we see in order to keep our eyes on the ad space as long as possible is taking a toll on our brains, health, society and democracy. Our data turns into cash for Big Tech as it flows from our phones; smart TVs; video doorbells; computers; cars; gaming consoles; Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube accounts; medical records; Amazon clicks; and Google searches.

We are at the center of the world's largest industry that lives, breathes and profits from our personal informatio­n, and that giant has run roughshod through our lives for too long. We must get serious about claiming our online privacy and making Big Tech follow the same rules as other industries.

Shifting tides in our economy, institutio­ns and society demand thoughtful action to make sure the digital economy evolves in a fair, democratic and sustainabl­e way. We can't wait for Congress to agree on regulation­s to tame Big Tech's excesses in cornering markets and mining our personal data.

A Technology Fairness Commission and a data dividend would be a practical start, because contrary to the alarm bells, Big Tech is not “collapsing.” It's not even in trouble. And it's here to stay.

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