Los Angeles Times

Break up large tech ‘ monopolies,’ House panel says

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A House panel proposed a series of far- reaching antitrust reforms to curb the power of U. S. technology giants including Amazon. com Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’ s Google, the result of a yearlong antitrust investigat­ion that found the companies are abusing their dominance.

The recommenda­tions, contained in a 449- page report from the House antitrust subcommitt­ee, represent the most dramatic proposal to overhaul competitio­n law in decades and could lead to the breakup of tech companies if approved by Congress.

“Companies that once were scrappy, underdog startups that challenged the status quo have become the kinds of monopolies we last saw in the era of oil barons and railroad tycoons,” the Democratic- led panel said. “These firms have too much power, and that power must be reined in and subject to appropriat­e oversight and enforcemen­t. Our economy and democracy are at stake.”

The report’s most draconian recommenda­tion is for Congress to consider legislatio­n that would either prevent tech companies from owning different lines of businesses, which could lead to a breakup of the companies, or impose certain organizati­onal structures on the companies.

Shares of the four large technology companies targeted in the report — Amazon, Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and Google — all fell slightly more than the overall market, which had dropped on news that President Trump was suspending stimulus negotiatio­ns.

Nasdaq stock futures held onto their declines.

Alphabet fell 2.2% to $ 1,451.02, Apple dropped 2.9% to $ 113.16, Amazon fell 3.1% to $ 3,099.96 and Facebook was down 2.3% to $ 258.66.

The goal would be to reduce conf licts of interest that come from competing with other companies that depend on the platforms to access users, according to the report.

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