The
digital revolution has spawned a handful of U.S.-based
technology companies since the 1990s that now have a combined
financial and cultural power greater than most sovereign states.
Tom Watson will lay out plans which include creating a
regulator, creating a Digital Bill of Rights and giving social
media firms a broad legal duty of care to protect users.
"The scale of the largest companies is rightly the subject of
scrutiny. We should take seriously the calls to break them up if
it is in the public interest," Watson is expected to say.
Facebook in particular has come under scrutiny over its use of
data. Concerns about its ability to safeguard user data have
sparked a government lawsuit in the United States, while it has
been criticized by lawmakers around the world.
Shares have been hit by investors concern about snowballing
legal and regulatory efforts over its data use polices.
Labour did not set out in detail how a British regulator might
attempt to break up some of the most powerful companies in the
world, almost of which are based outside the United Kingdom.
In a interview with BBC radio, Watson cited Facebook's purchase
of Instagram an example of a merger that concentrated user data
in a dangerous way.
"Our competition laws are not fit for the age of big data," he
said.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
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