New York Daily News

TECH PARTY IS OVER

Once White House darlings, firms now face backlash

- BY MARCY GORDON

WASHINGTON — The Obama-Biden administra­tion was a charmed era for America’s tech companies — a moment when they were lionized as innovators, hailed as job creators and largely left alone.

Now Joe Biden is coming back as president. But times have changed.

The halcyon days of an adoring Washington are unlikely to return when Biden takes the oath of office Jan. 20, with mounting legislativ­e and regulatory challenges to the industry — including stronger enforcemen­t of antitrust laws — nearly certain to outlast the tenure of President Trump.

“The techlash is in full force,” said Eric Goldman, a law professor at Santa Clara University and co-director of its High Tech Law Institute.

In the years since Barack Obama and Biden left the White House, the tech industry’s political fortunes have flipped.

Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple have come under scrutiny from Congress, federal regulators, state attorneys general and European authoritie­s. Twitter has found itself in frequent run-ins with lawmakers over its policies for moderating content on its platform.

And companies have seen their political support in Congress erode.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle champion stronger oversight of the industry, arguing its massive market power is out of control, crushing smaller competitor­s and endangerin­g consumers’ privacy.

They say the companies hide behind a legal shield to allow false informatio­n to flourish on their social media networks or to entrench bias.

In steps Biden, who may aim to take a bite out of the dominance of Big Tech and may welcome an opportunit­y to work with the opposing side to curb the power of a common adversary.

As a presidenti­al contender, Biden said the breakup of big tech companies should be considered. Dismantlin­g the tech giants is “something we should take a really hard look at,” he told The Associated Press in an interview.

He said he wants to crimp the social media companies’ long-held legal protection­s for speech on their platforms. And he singled out Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg for scorn, calling him “a real problem.”

The Biden administra­tion is also expected to press forward with the Trump Justice Department’s new antitrust lawsuit against Google, though its shape likely could be changed.

But if Biden decides to pursue major legislatio­n to overhaul the laws governing tech competitio­n, he’ll have to navigate a tricky congressio­nal and political landscape.

Democratic lawmakers in the House, after a sweeping investigat­ion by a Judiciary Committee panel, called last month for Congress to rein in Big Tech, possibly forcing the giants to break up their businesses while making it harder for them to acquire others and imposing new rules to safeguard competitio­n.

Those kinds of mandated breakups through a legislativ­e overhaul would be a radical step for Congress to take and could be a bridge too far for most Republican­s.

Though it hasn’t been settled, Biden faces the possibilit­y of becoming the first Democrat in modern history to take office without his party controllin­g Congress.

Republican­s would retain control of the Senate by winning one of two runoff elections in Georgia in January. Democrats have already won the House.

Republican control of the Senate would force Biden to curb his ambitions and pursue a different legislativ­e agenda, one rooted in bipartisan­ship. Legislatio­n on the tech industry could be one area of possible agreement.

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