San Antonio Express-News

FTC sues to stop Meta’s acquisitio­n of VR company

- By Barbara Ortutay

Federal regulators opened their campaign to block Facebook parent Meta’s acquisitio­n of a virtual-reality company Thursday in a San Jose, Calif., courtroom.

In a landmark legal challenge to a Big Tech merger, the Federal Trade Commission has sued to prevent Meta’s acquisitio­n of Within Unlimited and its fitness app Supernatur­al, asserting it would hurt competitio­n and violate antitrust laws.

The FTC is arguing that, were it not for the Within acquisitio­n, Meta would have developed its own dedicated VR fitness up, entering this nascent market with its own product as a new competitor — and Within would have remained in independen­t player in the market.

Regulators cite a 2015 email from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to Facebook executives saying that his vision for “the next wave of computing” — namely virtual and augmented reality — was control of apps as well as the platform on which those apps are distribute­d. The email said that a key part of this strategy is for the company to be “completely ubiquitous in killer apps,” which are apps that prove the value of the technology.

“Meta could have used “all its vast resources and capabiliti­es” to build its own VR fitness app, said FTC lawyer Abby Dennis. Instead, she added, when Meta heard a rumor that Within was being pursued by Apple, it decided instead “to just acquire the market leader” in the space.

Meta lawyer Mark Hansen disputed the FTC’S claim that the company was going to build its own app.

“There will be no evidence that Meta was ready” to do anything, he said.

Meta Platforms Inc. has been unsuccessf­ul in its bid to have the case dismissed after arguing that the U.S. failed to prove that the virtual reality market is concentrat­ed with high barriers to entry.

After Meta argued that the lawsuit contained “nothing more than the FTC’S speculatio­n about what Meta might have done,” the FTC revised its complaint in October to narrow the focus of its allegation­s.

Over the summer, FTC Chair Lina Khan and the other two Democratic commission­ers voted to block the deal, with two Republican­s going the other way.

The Within case is part of a more aggressive stance by the FTC following its 2020 antitrust lawsuit against Facebook seeking remedies that could include a forced spinoff of Instagram and Whatsapp, or a restructur­ing of the company.

Zuckerberg was dropped as a defendant in the case in August, but he is expected to testify next week.

Under Zuckerberg’s leadership, Meta began a campaign to conquer virtual reality in 2014 with its acquisitio­n of headset maker Oculus VR. Since then,

Meta’s VR headsets have become the cornerston­e of its growth in the virtual reality space, the FTC noted in its suit. Fueled by the popularity of its top-selling Quest headsets, Meta’s Quest Store has become a leading U.S. platform with more than 400 apps available to download, according to the agency.

Hansen said more than 99 percent of the apps available to Quest users were made by independen­t developers, not Meta.

Meta’s strategy for growth, he added, “depends on getting third-party developers to build apps for Quest.”

“Meta needs those third-party apps as much, if not more, than apps need Meta — there is no gatekeepin­g going on.”

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