Los Angeles Times

Biden likely to keep pressure on Facebook

President- elect didn’t make tech policy a focus in his campaign, but he has been critical of the industry.

- By Brian Contreras Times staff writers Johana Bhuiyan and Suhauna Hussain contribute­d to this report.

Coming on the tail end of President Trump’s administra­tion, the lawsuits against Facebook announced Wednesday by the Federal Trade Commission and 46 states and districts might seem like the last angry quack of a lame duck who’s harbored a long- running grievance against social media executives.

But the breadth of the bipartisan coalition bringing forward the suits, which allege anti- competitiv­e practices by Facebook and seek to undo its acquisitio­ns of Instagram and WhatsApp, suggests this f ight will continue well past Trump’s last day in office.

The participat­ion of nearly every Democratic attorney general in the country suggests the incoming administra­tion of President- Elect Joe Biden will press on with the suits, said Gigi Sohn, a distinguis­hed fellow at the Georgetown Law Institute for Technology Law and Policy.

“It’s not going away,” she said.

Herbert Hovenkamp, an

antitrust policy expert and professor at University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Carey Law School, agreed.

“The loudest cries against the big platforms have come from Democrats historical­ly, so the fact that these lawsuits are starting out in a Republican administra­tion I think bodes poorly for them because they’re not going to get a lot of political relief from Congress,” Hovenkamp said.

Unlike some of his rivals for the Democratic nomination, Biden didn’t make tech policy a focus of his cam

paign, leaving uncertain how he plans to deal with the concentrat­ion of economic and political power in the hands of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft. Some experts predict more active trust- busting, and Biden has indicated openness to that approach: In 2019, he told the Associated Press that breaking up Facebook “is something we should take a really hard look at.”

Where President Obama had a warm relationsh­ip with Silicon Valley, Biden’s tone has been less cordial. In

a preelectio­n interview with the New York Times, he called tech leaders “little creeps” and criticized the industry for its “overwhelmi­ng arrogance.”

In the same discussion, he called for a repeal of Section 230 — the law protecting social media platforms’ right to moderate user- generated content and shielding them from liability for it — and suggested support for an active government role in regulating the internet.

“In every other revolution that we’ve had technologi­cally, it’s taken somewhere between six years and a generation for a government to come in and level the playing field again,” Biden said. The internet today presents the same challenges, he said, “and it’s a responsibi­lity of government to make sure it is not abused.”

Early moves Biden has made in staffing up his administra­tion, however, have portended a cozier relationsh­ip with Big Tech.

Biden’s transition team includes employees from a long list of tech companies, including Amazon, Airbnb, Microsoft and Uber; these appointees won’t necessaril­y stay on past the inaugurati­on but will have a hand in choosing who does. Google’s former executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, has reportedly held discussion­s about leading a new White House task force on technology

With Trump using his bully pulpit to rail against alleged monopolies in the tech sector, the laissez- faire consensus of the Obama years has given way in both parties to a shared sense that the power of the tech giants must be addressed — even if the two sides disagree about what that means.

Liberals have criticized digital informatio­n platforms, in particular Facebook, for spreading misinforma­tion, promoting hate speech and giving foreign adversarie­s inf luence over U. S. elections. Conservati­ves have advanced the idea that internet platforms censor voices from the right ( a claim Facebook’s own data contradict).

After a bipartisan hearing by the House antitrust committee in July, Democrats and Republican­s released separate reports on the state of tech industry consolidat­ion. Despite the split, the Republican version still found common ground with the Democrats in concluding that “Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook have used their monopoly power to act as gatekeeper­s to the marketplac­e, undermine potential competitio­n, and pick winners and losers.”

In February, the FTC began seeking informatio­n about potentiall­y anti- competitiv­e acquisitio­ns undertaken by Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon and Microsoft over the last decade; the Justice Department opened a similar investigat­ion in July 2019.

Tech leaders — including Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg — have been called before Congress repeatedly so Republican lawmakers could accuse them of silencing conservati­ve voices online, with this summer’s crackdown on a New York Post story critical of then- candidate Biden prompting loud outrage. Trump himself has been an avid critic of the major social media platforms, often using the very platforms he was criticizin­g to call for an end to Section 230.

But where Trump’s attempt to modify Section 230 via executive order hinged on a questionab­le interpreta­tion of the law, antitrust experts see the case against Facebook as solid.

“Facebook will be broken up, but it’ll take a few years for the case to wind its way through the court,” said Matt Stoller, author of “Goliath: The Hundred Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy.” “The evidence in here is damning.” Sohn agreed. “This was a well- investigat­ed, well- considered, wellthough­t- out position by the Federal Trade Commission,” she said. The antitrust concerns raised and the breadth of support behind it make the case “a lot bigger than Trumpism.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg appears at a House Financial Services Committee hearing in 2019. Facebook may not get a break when Joe Biden takes off ice.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg appears at a House Financial Services Committee hearing in 2019. Facebook may not get a break when Joe Biden takes off ice.

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