Santa Fe New Mexican

Feds, states say Facebook is monopoly, seek to break up giant

- By Cecilia Kang and Mike Isaac

WASHINGTON — The Federal Trade Commission and more than 40 states accused Facebook on Wednesday of becoming a social media monopoly by buying up its rivals to illegally squash competitio­n, and said the deals that turned the social network into a behemoth should be unwound.

Federal and state regulators, who have been investigat­ing the company for over 18 months, said in separate lawsuits that Facebook’s purchases, especially Instagram for $1 billion in 2012 and WhatsApp for $19 billion two years later, eliminated competitio­n that could have one day challenged the company’s dominance.

Since those deals, Instagram and WhatsApp have skyrockete­d in popularity, giving Facebook control over three of the world’s most popular social media and messaging apps. The applicatio­ns have helped catapult Facebook from a company started in a college dorm room 16 years ago to an internet powerhouse valued at more than $800 billion.

The prosecutor­s called for Facebook to break off Instagram and WhatsApp and for new restrictio­ns on future deals, in what amounted to some of the most severe penalties regulators can demand.

“For nearly a decade, Facebook has used its dominance and monopoly power to crush smaller rivals and snuff out competitio­n, all at the expense of everyday users,” said Attorney General Letitia James of New York, who led the multistate investigat­ion into the company in parallel with the federal agency.

The lawsuits, filed in the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, underscore the growing bipartisan and internatio­nal tsunami against Big Tech. Lawmakers and regulators have zeroed in on the grip that Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple maintain on commerce, electronic­s, social networking, search and online advertisin­g, remaking the nation’s economy. President Donald Trump has argued repeatedly that the tech giants have too much power and influence, and allies of President-elect Joe Biden make similar complaints.

The investigat­ions already led to a lawsuit against Google, brought by the Justice Department two months ago, that accuses the search giant of illegally protecting a monopoly. Prosecutor­s in that case, though, stopped short of demanding that Google break off any parts of its business. At least one more suit against Google, by both Republican and Democratic officials, is expected by the end of the year. In Europe, regulators are proposing tougher laws against the industry and have issued billions of dollars in penalties for the violation of competitio­n laws.

The lawsuits against Facebook are expected to set off a long legal battle. The company has long denied any illegal anti-competitiv­e behavior and is expected to use its deep well of money to defend itself. Few major antitrust cases have centered on mergers approved years earlier. The FTC signed off on Facebook’s deals for Instagram and WhatsApp during Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

If the prosecutor­s succeed, the cases could remake the company, which has experience­d only unfettered growth. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, has described a breakup of the company as an “existentia­l” threat. The company’s stock fell 2 percent, to $277.70 a share, after the lawsuits were announced.

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