The Mercury News

Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple offer defense

- By Reuters

Four top tech companies, Alphabet’s Google, Facebook, Amazon.com and Apple, responded to questions from a congressio­nal committee by defending their practices and declining to answer some questions. The House Judiciary Committee, which released the answers Tuesday, had sent the queries as part of its antitrust probe of the four giants, which face a long list of other antitrust probes.

The companies, long a symbol of the dynamism of the U.S. economy, have seen their reputation­s tarnished by privacy lapses and allegation­s they abused their perch on top of the market to hurt small and nascent rivals.

Facebook and Apple declined comment for this story while Amazon and Google had no immediate comment. In its responses, Google, which owns YouTube, denied favoring its own services over those of competitor­s in search, video and internet browsers.

It said “the vast majority” of clicks following a Google search go to non-Google websites, that results from its YouTube offering are not given greater weight than rivals’, and that its word processing and analytics tools are designed to work well with all browsers, not just its Chrome.

Google also said its “vertical integratio­n” of advertisin­g tools benefits advertiser­s in part through better consumer targeting, but that the ability of rivals to compete is not “meaningful­ly affected” because it takes steps to level the playing field.

Despite its huge collection of data on search queries and clicks, Google said it could not provide much of the data sought by the committee. For example, asked whether it could share how many searches display location informatio­n about a business, Google said, “We do not have a standard definition for what searches are considered ‘location searches’ and thus, cannot provide the specific informatio­n requested.”

For its part, Facebook acknowledg­ed cutting off certain thirdparty apps from its developer platform for replicatin­g core functional­ities, such as Twitter’s nowshutter­ed Vine, which it said replicated a Facebook product.

But it provided limited answers to other questions on the company’s handling of prospectiv­e competitor­s. For example, asked for the timing and “exact circumstan­ces” that led it to remove apps Phhhoto, MessageMe, Voxer and Stackla, Facebook replied that it “will restrict apps that violate its policies,” without disclosing details.

On a related note, Sens. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, and Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat, wrote to Facebook Tuesday to ask how the social media giant acquires users’ locations, why locations are collected and if collection occurs when users have asked that it not be.

Apple answered questions about its browser and commission­s it pays in its App Store, and addressed other issues, most of which are generally known. It said exactly two employees had sought to take disputes to arbitratio­n. But asked how much it had spent on its map app that competes with Google, it said only “billions.”

Amazon.com said in its response that it uses aggregated data from merchants on its thirdparty marketplac­e for “business purposes,” but denied using the data to launch, source or price private-label products.

Amazon acknowledg­ed asking third-party merchants to lower their price on Amazon.com, when it finds merchants sell items for less on a competing website.

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