Los Angeles Times

FTC chief backs tech breakups

For competitio­n’s sake, they could be right remedy, he says.

- By David McLaughlin McLaughlin writes for Bloomberg with assistance from Ben Brody, Naomi Nix and Joe Light.

The head of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said he’s prepared to break up major technology platforms if necessary by undoing their past mergers as his agency investigat­es whether companies including Facebook Inc. are harming competitio­n.

FTC Chairman Joe Simons said in an interview Tuesday that breaking up a company is challengin­g but could be the right remedy to rein in dominant companies and restore competitio­n.

“If you have to, you do it,” Simons said about breaking up tech companies. “It’s not ideal because it’s very messy. But if you have to, you have to.”

Simons is overseeing a tech task force to examine conduct in the industry and could move to unwind mergers if investigat­ors find the deals were anti-competitiv­e. The agency has opened a broad investigat­ion into Facebook, including whether the company acquired start-ups to thwart competitio­n, according to people familiar with the matter.

Facebook bought photoshari­ng site Instagram in 2012 and messaging service WhatsApp in 2014. The FTC approved both acquisitio­ns at the time. Critics including Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes have called for antitrust enforcers to unwind those deals.

U.S. antitrust enforcers could move to unwind the acquisitio­ns even though they previously won approval, Simons said. The FTC could say “we made a mistake,” he said. He would need a court to approve such a move.

Facebook declined to comment.

Giant tech firms are coming under increasing scrutiny in Washington over a wave of acquisitio­ns of startups. Antitrust experts and lawmakers argue that the deals have allowed the companies to shut down competitio­n by buying — and eliminatin­g — emerging rivals.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren, a Massachuse­tts senator, has been among the most outspoken about acquisitio­ns by big tech companies, saying this year that they are “using mergers to limit competitio­n” by buying rivals. She cited Facebook’s deal for Instagram, Google’s acquisitio­n of mapping company Waze and Amazon.com Inc.’s takeover of Diapers.com.

Simons didn’t confirm details of the Facebook investigat­ion beyond what the company disclosed in July, when it said that the FTC had initiated a broad probe into several business lines — social media, digital advertisin­g and mobile applicatio­ns. Any inquiry into the company’s past acquisitio­ns would focus on what would have happened to those companies if they hadn’t been bought by Facebook, Simons said.

“There’s a question about what caused Instagram to be as successful as it is,” Simons said. “Was it the fact that the seed was already there and it was going to be germinated no matter what, or was the seed germinated because Facebook acquired it?”

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