The Guardian (USA)

Big tech was allowed to spread misinforma­tion unchecked. Will Biden hold them accountabl­e?

- Joan Donovan and Amed Khan

Donald Trump’s election lies and the 6 January attack on the US Capitol have highlighte­d how big tech has led our society down a path of conspiraci­es and radicalism by ignoring the mounting evidence that their products are dangerous.

But the spread of deadly misinforma­tion on a global scale was enabled by the absence of antitrust enforcemen­t by the federal government to rein in out-of-control monopolies such as Facebook and Google. And there is a real risk social media giants could sidestep accountabi­lity once again.

Trump’s insistence that he won the election was an attack on democracy that culminated in the attack on the US Capitol. The events were as much the fault of Sundar Pichai, Jack Dorsey and Mark Zuckerberg – CEOs of Google, Twitter and Facebook, respective­ly – as they were the fault of Trump and his cadre of co-conspirato­rs.

During the early days of social media, no service operated at the scale of today’s Goliaths. Adoption was limited and online communitie­s lived in small and isolated pockets. When the Egyptian uprisings of 2011 proved the power of these services, the US state department became their cheerleade­rs, offering them a veneer of exceptiona­lism which would protect them from scrutiny as they grew exponentia­lly.

Later, dictators and anti-democratic actors would study and co-opt these tools for their own purposes. As the megaphones got larger, the voices of bad actors also got louder. As the networks got bigger, the feedback loop amplifying those voices became stronger. It is unimaginab­le that QAnon could gain a mass following without tech companies’ dangerous indifferen­ce.

Eventually, these platforms became immune to forces of competitio­n in the marketplac­e – they became informatio­n monopolies with runaway scale. Absent any accountabi­lity from watchdogs or the marketplac­e, fringe conspiracy theories enjoyed unchecked propagatio­n. We can mark networked conspiraci­es from birtherism to QAnon as straight lines through the same coterie of misinforme­rs who came to power alongside Trump.

Today, most global internet activity happens on services owned by either Facebook or Alphabet, which includes YouTube and Google. The internet has calcified into a pair of monopolies who protect their size by optimizing to maximize “engagement”. Sadly, algorithms designed to increase dependency and usage are far more profitable than ones that would encourage timely, local, relevant and, most importantl­y, accurate informatio­n. The truth, in a word, is boring. Facts rarely animate the kind of compulsive engagement rewarded by recommenda­tion and search algorithms.

The best tool – if not the only tool – to hold big tech accountabl­e is antitrust enforcemen­t: enforcing the existing antitrust laws designed to rein in companies’ influence over other political, economic and social institutio­ns.

Antitrust enforcemen­t has historical­ly been the US government’s greatest weapon against such firms. From breaking up the trusts at the start of the 20th century to the present day, antitrust enforcemen­t spurs competitio­n and ingenuity while re-empowering citizens. Most antitrust historians agree that absent US v Microsoft

in 1998, which stopped Microsoft from bundling products and effectivel­y killing off other browsers, the modern internet would have been strangled in the crib.

Ironically, Google and Facebook were the beneficiar­ies of such enforcemen­t. Over two decades would pass before US authoritie­s brought antitrust suits against Google and Facebook last year. Until then, antitrust had languished as a tool to counterbal­ance abusive monopolies. Big tech sees an existentia­l threat in the renewed calls for antitrust, and these companies have aggressive­ly lobbied to ensure key vacancies in the Biden administra­tion are filled by their friends.

The Democratic party is especially vulnerable to soft capture by these tech firms. Big tech executives are mostly left-leaning and donate millions to progressiv­e causes while spouting feelgood rhetoric of inclusion and connectivi­ty. During the Obama administra­tion, Google and Facebook were treated as exceptiona­l, avoiding any meaningful regulatory scrutiny. Democratic Senate leadership, specifical­ly Senator Chuck Schumer, has recently signaled he will treat these companies with kid gloves.

The Biden administra­tion cannot repeat the Obama legacy of installing big tech-friendly individual­s to these critical but often under-the-radar roles. The new administra­tion, in consultati­on with Schumer, will be tasked with appointing a new assistant attorney general for antitrust at the Depart

ment of Justice and up to three members of the Federal Trade Commission. Figures friendly to big tech in those positions could abruptly settle the pending litigation against Google or Facebook.

President Joe Biden and Schumer must reject any candidate who has worked in the service of big tech. Any former White House or congressio­nal personnel who gave these companies a pass during the Obama administra­tion should also be disqualifi­ed from considerat­ion. Allowing big tech’s lawyers and plants to run the antitrust agencies would be the equivalent of allowing a climate-change-denying big oil executive run the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The public is beginning to recognize the harms to society wrought by big tech and a vibrant and bipartisan anti-monopoly movement with diverse scholars, and activists has risen over the past few years. Two-thirds of Democratic voters believe, along with a majority of Republican­s, that Biden should “refuse to appoint executives, lobbyists, or lawyers for these companies to positions of power or influence in his administra­tion while this legal activity is pending”. This gives the Democratic party an opportunit­y to do the right thing for our country and attract new voters by fighting for the web we want.

Big tech played a central role in the dangerous attack on the US Capitol and all of the events which led to it. Biden’s antitrust appointees will be the ones who decide if there are any consequenc­es to be paid.

 ?? Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters ?? A Donald Trump supporter holds a flag with a reference to QAnon.
Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters A Donald Trump supporter holds a flag with a reference to QAnon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States