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US lawmakers unveil 5 bills targeting Big Tech

The legislatio­n is aimed at reining in the power wielded by Silicon Valley giants Apple, Facebook, Google and Amazon.

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Lawmakers in the United States put forward five bills on Friday aimed at curbing the market power of so-called Big Tech.

The bipartisan legislatio­n is aimed at tackling the issues identified in a 15-month investigat­ion into the market dominance of Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook, carried out by the House Judiciary Committee's antitrust subcommitt­ee.

The probe found that the four tech giants had abused their market power by charging excessive fees, imposing tough contract terms and extracting crucial data from individual­s and businesses that use their services.

The potentiall­y game-changing legislativ­e package must now pass through several votes before being signed into law by US President Joe Biden.

What changes would the legislatio­n make?

The measures would make it harder for mega-companies like Amazon and Google to buy out smaller competitor­s in mergers — they have completed dozens of these in recent years.

It would facilitate the breakup of firms that use their dominant position in their core business to make deep inroads into another.

The proposals would prohibit

Big Tech companies from favoring their own products and services over competitor­s on their platforms.

The bills also ask Congress to boost the enforcemen­t powers of antitrust regulators, such as the Federal Trade Commission.

"They [Big Tech companies] are in a unique position to pick winners and losers, destroy small businesses, raise prices on consumers and put folks out of work," the House Judiciary's Antitrust Subcommitt­ee chairman David Cicilline said, introducin­g the measures on Friday.

The goal, he said, is to "level the playing field" and ensure that powerful tech companies follow the same rules as other businesses.

Why have the bills been proposed now?

Tech giants have enjoyed light-touch regulation for decades, but they are now facing increasing scrutiny in the US and Europe due to concerns about monopoly-like power.

Finance ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) economies pledged last week to commit to a minimum global level of corporate tax of at least 15%, following an initial proposal by Biden.

The move aims to get multinatio­nals — particular­ly tech giants — to pay more into government coffers hit hard by the pandemic.

What next for the proposed legislatio­n?

The antitrust bills need to be debated and voted favorably out of the Judiciary Committee before receiving a vote by the full House of Representa­tives.

They would then need approval from the Senate before they could be signed into law by Biden.

kmm/mm (AFP, AP)

 ??  ?? US House lawmakers have proposed bills to limit the power of big tech companies
US House lawmakers have proposed bills to limit the power of big tech companies

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