Marin Independent Journal

States sue Facebook for ‘predatory’ conduct

- By Marcy Gordon and Michael R. Sisak

Federal regulators asked Facebook to be ordered to divest its Instagram and WhatsApp messaging services.

WASHINGTON » The U.S. government and 48 states and districts sued Facebook Wednesday, accusing it of abusing its market power in social networking to crush smaller competitor­s and seeking remedies that could include a forced spinoff of the social network’s Instagram and WhatsApp messaging services.

The landmark antitrust lawsuits, announced by the Federal Trade Commission and New York Attorney General Letitia James, mark the second major government offensive this year against seemingly untouchabl­e tech behemoths. The Justice Department sued Google in October for abusing its dominance in online search and advertisin­g — the government’s most significan­t attempt to buttress competitio­n since its historic case against Microsoft two decades ago. Amazon and Apple also have been under investigat­ion in Congress and by federal authoritie­s for alleged anticompet­itive conduct.

James noted at a press conference that “it’s really critically important that we block this predatory acquisitio­n of companies and that we restore confidence to the market.”

The FTC said Facebook has engaged in a “a systematic strategy” to eliminate its competitio­n, including by purchasing smaller upand-coming rivals like Instagram in 2012 and WhatsApp in 2014. James echoed that in her press conference, saying Facebook “used its monopoly power to crush smaller rivals and snuff out competitio­n, all at the expense of everyday users.”

The FTC fined Facebook $5 billion in 2019 for privacy violations and instituted new oversight and restrictio­ns on its business. The fine was the largest the agency has ever levied on a tech company, although it had no visible impact on Facebook’s business.

Facebook called the government actions “revisionis­t history” that punishes successful businesses and noted that the FTC cleared the Instagram and WhatsApp acquisitio­ns years ago. “The government now wants a do- over, sending a chilling warning to American business that no sale is ever final,” Facebook general counsel Jennifer Newstead said in a statement that echoed the company’s response to a recent congressio­nal antitrust probe.

Facebook is the world’s biggest social network with 2.7 billion users and a company with a market value of nearly $800 billion whose CEO Mark Zuckerberg is the world’s fifth-richest individual and the most public face of Big Tech swagger.

James alleged Facebook had a practice of opening its site to third-party app developers, then abruptly cutting off developers that it saw as a threat. The lawsuit — which includes 46 states, Guam and the District of Columbia — accuses Facebook of anti-competitiv­e conduct and using its market dominance to harvest consumer data and reap a fortune in advertisin­g revenues.

North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, who was on the executive committee of attorneys general conducting the investigat­ion, said the litigation has the potential to alter the communicat­ions landscape the way the breakup of AT&T’s local phone service monopoly in the early 1980s did.

“Our hope is to restructur­e the social networking marketplac­e in the United States, and right now there’s one player,” Stein told reporters. James said the coalition worked collaborat­ively with the FTC but noted the attorneys general conducted their investigat­ion separately.

Antitrust expert Rebecca Allenswort­h, a law professor at Vanderbilt University, said it is “hard to win any antitrust lawsuit and this one is not any different.” But as far as antitrust cases go, she added, the government has a strong one.

The Justice Department’s suit against Google, announced just two weeks before Election Day, brought accusation­s of political motivation from some quarters. It was filed by a cabinet agency headed by an attorney general seen as a close ally of President Donald Trump, who has often publicly criticized Google.

The FTC, by contrast, is an independen­t regulatory agency whose five commission­ers currently include three Republican­s and two Democrats.

President-elect Joe Biden has said the breakup of Big Tech giants should be seriously considered. He has singled out Facebook’s Zuckerberg for scorn, calling him “a real problem.”

Instagram and WhatsApp are among some 70 companies that Facebook has acquired over the past 15 years. But they are the ones most frequently held up by Facebook critics as properties that should be split off.

Facebook paid $1 billion for Instagram, bolstering the social network’s business a month before its stock went public. At the time, the photo-sharing app had about 30 million users and wasn’t producing any revenue. A few years later, Facebook acquired WhatsApp, an encrypted messaging service, for $19 billion.

Zuckerberg vowed both companies would be run independen­tly, but over the years the services have become increasing­ly integrated. Users are now able to link accounts and share content across the platforms. Instagram now has more than 1 billion users worldwide. Such integratio­n could make it more difficult to break off the companies.

NetChoice, a Washington trade associatio­n that includes Facebook as a member, quickly panned the lawsuits. The case for antitrust enforcemen­t against Facebook “has never been weaker,” NetChoice vice president Carl Szabo said in a statement, pointing to newer social services such as TikTok and Snapchat as rivals that could “overtake” older platforms.

“These lawsuits mark an important turning point in the battle to rein in Big Tech monopolies and to reinvigora­te antitrust enforcemen­t,” said Alex Harman, competitio­n policy advocate for Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group.

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 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Aug. 6, New York State Attorney General Letitia James takes a question at a news conference in New York. Federal regulators and a group of states launched a landmark antitrust offensive against Facebook, accusing the social network of abusing its market power in social networking to crush smaller competitor­s. “It’s really critically important that we block this predatory acquisitio­n of companies and that we restore confidence to the market,” said James during a press conference announcing the lawsuit.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Aug. 6, New York State Attorney General Letitia James takes a question at a news conference in New York. Federal regulators and a group of states launched a landmark antitrust offensive against Facebook, accusing the social network of abusing its market power in social networking to crush smaller competitor­s. “It’s really critically important that we block this predatory acquisitio­n of companies and that we restore confidence to the market,” said James during a press conference announcing the lawsuit.

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