Facebook Inc's <FB.O> Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon.com Inc's <AMZN.O>
Jeff Bezos, Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O>-owned Google's Sundar Pichai
and Apple Inc's <APPL.O> Tim Cook - who together represent about
$5 trillion of the U.S. economy - are set to speak before the
House Judiciary Committee's antitrust panel.
Subcommittee Chairman David Cicilline has been looking in to
allegations by critics that the companies have hurt competitors
and consumers with their business practices and seemingly
insatiable appetite for data.
The CEOs plan to defend themselves https://reut.rs/2P4lpYN by
saying they themselves face competition and by pushing back
against claims they are dominant, which has led to fears the
hearing will bring up little new information to hold the
companies accountable in the long term. https://reut.rs/2P4lpYN
The hearing marks the first time the four CEOs have appeared
together before lawmakers, and will also be the first-ever
appearance of Bezos before Congress.
"The hearing is less about substance and is designed to bring
attention to Congressman Cicilline and the work the subcommittee
has been doing for the past year," said Jesse Blumenthal, who
leads technology and innovation at Stand Together, a group that
sides with tech companies that have come under fire from
lawmakers and regulators in Washington.
The hearing will also test U.S. lawmakers' ability to ask sharp,
pointed questions that reflect an understanding of how Big Tech
operates. Previous high-profile hearings involving tech
companies have exposed the somewhat limited grasp of Washington
politicians of how the internet and technology work.
It will also offer lawmakers from both parties a chance to bring
up the topic of content censorship - an increasingly sore point
for Republican lawmakers, who have repeatedly complained of
anti-conservative bias at Big Tech companies.
A detailed report with antitrust allegations against the four
tech platforms and recommendations on how to tame their market
power could be released by late summer or early fall by the
committee, which has separately amassed 1.3 million documents
from the companies, senior committee aides said.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz in Washington;
Editing by Chris Sanders and Matthew Lewis)
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