U.S. lawmakers accuse Big Tech of crushing rivals to
boost profits
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[July 30, 2020] By
Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Google and Facebook
took particularly sharp jabs for alleged abuse of their market power
from Democrats and Republicans on Wednesday in a much-anticipated
congressional hearing that put four of America's most prominent tech
CEOs in the hot seat.
The chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives antitrust panel
holding the hearing said afterwards that the four CEOs had acknowledged
concerning behavior.
"What we heard from witnesses at the hearing confirmed the evidence that
we have collected over the last year," Representative David Cicilline, a
Democrat, told Reuters.
Facebook Inc's Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon.com Inc's Jeff Bezos, Google
owner Alphabet Inc's Sundar Pichai and Apple Inc's Tim Cook - whose
companies have a combined market value of about $5 trillion - parried a
range of accusations that they crippled smaller rivals in their quest
for market share.
The videoconference hearing was the first time the four CEOs have
appeared together before lawmakers.
Though it was Bezos' first congressional testimony, he appeared the
least fazed. Cook drew fewer barbed questions than Bezos and handled
them efficiently. Zuckerberg suffered the most damage, stumbling at
times when confronted with internal emails.
Pichai, CEO of both Alphabet and Google, took the most heat from
conservatives on the panel and looked the worse for it, as he repeatedly
told lawmakers he would be happy to look into various situations and get
back to them.
The Big Tech hearing triggered scorn from viewers over its own tech
issues. Bezos escaped questioning for about an hour in what may have
been a tech issue and was caught on screen reaching for what appeared to
be a snack.
Poor audio, flat-screen televisions switching off, and chief executives
appearing together as thumbnails on a large screen led to mockery of the
virtual set-up on Twitter.
Lawmakers descended into shouting at each other at points, with a
pandemic twist. One yelled: "Put your mask on!"
THEFT, COPYING, CONTENT MODERATION
Cicilline set the tone for the hearing when he began by accusing Google
of theft. "Why does Google steal content from honest businesses?" he
asked. He alleged Google stole reviews from Yelp Inc and threatened to
delist Yelp from search results if it objected.
Pichai responded mildly that he would want to know the specifics of the
accusation. "We conduct ourselves to the highest standards," he added,
disagreeing with the characterization.
Facebook's Zuckerberg took a series of questions about the company's
purchase of Instagram in 2012 and whether it was acquired because it was
a threat, as he dubbed it in an email obtained by the committee.
[to top of second column] |
House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and
Administrative Law Chair David Cicilline (D-RI), speaks during a
hearing on "Online Platforms and Market Power", in the Rayburn House
office Building on Capitol Hill, in Washington, U.S., July 29, 2020.
Mandel Ngan/Pool via REUTERS
Zuckerberg responded that Instagram at the time was a tiny photo-sharing app
rather than a social-media phenomenon.
In one of the more notable exchanges, Representative Pramila Jayapal, a
Democrat, pushed Zuckerberg on whether Facebook had ever copied its competitors.
"We've certainly adapted features that others have led in," he said.
"How many companies did Facebook end up copying?" she asked. "Is it less than
five? Less than 50?"
"Congresswoman, I don't know," Zuckerberg said.
Jayapal pressed Amazon's Bezos on whether the company used data from third-party
sellers in making sales decisions. An Amazon executive previously had denied the
practice under oath and was contradicted by a news report.
Bezos answered cautiously that the company had a policy against such actions.
"If we found that somebody violated it, we would take action against them," he
said.
On the Republican side, Representative Jim Jordan accused the companies of
hampering conservatives from reaching their supporters. Jordan pressed Pichai on
whether Google would help former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive
Democratic presidential nominee, win in November.
"We support both campaigns. We approach our work in a nonpartisan fashion,"
Pichai responded.
Representative Matt Gaetz asked Facebook's Zuckerberg whether content moderators
disadvantaged conservative content. Zuckerberg said they were trained to be
neutral.
"STREET FIGHT"
Apple's Cook rejected the notion there is nothing to stop his company from
raising the commissions it charges in the App Store.
"I disagree strongly with that," he said. "The competition for developers - they
can write their apps for Android or Windows or Xbox or PlayStation. We have
fierce competition at the developer side and the customer side, which is
essentially so competitive I would describe it as a street fight."
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, senior committee aides said.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz in Washington; Additional reporting
by David Shepardson in Washington, Katie Paul, Paresh Dave and Stephen Nellis in
San Francisco, Elizabeth Culliford in Birmingham, UK; Editing by Chris Sanders,
Matthew Lewis and Leslie Adler)
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