Lodi News-Sentinel

New Biden order on antitrust ratchets up pressure on Amazon and Microsoft

- Akash Pasricha and Katherine Anne Long

An executive order signed Friday by President Joe Biden directing federal agencies to beef up anticompet­ition rules increases the antitrust pressure facing large, local tech companies — Amazon in particular, though Microsoft could also be affected.

“Capitalism without competitio­n isn’t capitalism. It’s exploitati­on,” Biden said in a speech at the White House before signing the order.

Biden urged the Federal Trade Commission to establish rules that could limit how Amazon operates its $295 billion online retail marketplac­e. The executive order also asks the FTC to reconsider guidelines for mergers and acquisitio­ns, in part to prevent so-called “killer acquisitio­ns” of potential competitor­s.

The agency last year launched a comprehens­ive review of acquisitio­ns by big tech companies, including Amazon and Microsoft, between 2010 and 2019.

The order included other measures that would affect how local tech companies operate. The FTC is tasked with making it easier for consumers to repair their electronic devices.

Device manufactur­ers have historical­ly tried to limit consumers’ ability to repair devices at home or at independen­t repair shops, a practice that environmen­tal and consumer advocates have said boosts manufactur­ers’ bottom line at the cost of needless waste. Both Amazon and Microsoft have lobbied against previous efforts to ease device repair.

And tens of thousands of Seattle-area workers could be affected by the executive order’s instructio­n that the FTC ban or limit the use of noncompete agreements, which are common in the tech industry.

The order also included provisions addressing alleged anticompet­itive behavior in the pharmaceut­ical, transporta­tion and banking sectors.

Amazon did not respond to questions about the new executive order. Previously, the company has criticized antitrust reforms championed by the House Antitrust Subcommitt­ee, calling them “fringe notions” that “would destroy small business and hurt consumers.” Amazon in recent years has strengthen­ed its antitrust legal team and funneled more resources to lobbying on antitrust issues.

Microsoft declined to comment on the order.

Proponents of increased regulation on large tech companies lauded Biden’s action. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., the vice chair of the House Antitrust Subcommitt­ee, said in a statement that she was “thrilled” to see the new executive order.

“By unleashing the competitio­n powers of the federal government and empowering everyday people, we can break the grip corporatio­ns have on our economy and put money in the pockets of the people who need it,” she said in the statement.

Jayapal last month sponsored antitrust legislatio­n targeting large tech companies that if enacted, could allow the federal government to force Amazon to sell off its Marketplac­e platform for third-party vendors.

Biden’s executive order also takes aim at Amazon’s Marketplac­e platform by asking the FTC to rule that it’s unfair for companies to run online retail platforms on which they compete with their clients.

An investigat­ion last year by the House Antitrust Subcommitt­ee — authored in part by current FTC chair Lina Khan — found that Amazon had improperly used market data from third-party vendors on its platform to develop its own products that outsold competitor­s. The company’s platform is not a level playing field for vendors, the report concluded.

Groups advocating for a “right to repair” for consumer electronic­s also welcomed the executive order, saying it could help keep devices like phones, tablets and laptops out of landfills. Electronic­s are now the fastest growing category of waste in the world, according to a report by the World Economic Forum.

Advocates charge that one reason companies make it difficult to repair devices is to prompt consumers to keep upgrading their gadgets.

“If I was Microsoft, I would get with the program,” said Nathan Proctor, head of the United States Public Interest Research Group “Right to Repair” campaign. “I don’t see how they could possibly live up to their environmen­tal goals if they don’t change their tune on repair.” Microsoft has committed to becoming carbonnega­tive by 2030.

Microsoft has pushed back against efforts to make it easier for people to repair devices like Surface tablets and Xboxes. Until recently, the company voided a device’s warranty if it was repaired by anyone other than a Microsoft technician.

Microsoft revised that language after the FTC sent it a warning letter in 2018.

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