Is US Antitrust Action Against Big Tech Likely This Year? – BRINK

Posted: February 15, 2022 at 5:21 am

The push to regulate tech giants like Facebook and Google is a flashpoint between the US government, tech and innovation.

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The Democrats are pushing several bills in Congress to try to rein in the influence of tech giants such as Meta, Google and Apple before the midterms. In addition, the FTC under Lina Khan is pursuing action against them in the courts.

BRINK spoke to professor Randal Picker of the University of Chicago Law School, who focuses on antitrust law, to find out where things stand.

PICKER: The current antitrust landscape in the U.S. is exploding. On the legislative front, we have a number of bills in both the House and the Senate of different status. Some of them are out of committee, some of them are more extreme than others, but sometimes having extreme bills on the table makes something that would otherwise look pretty extreme seem much less so. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is very clear that she only brings things up when theyre ready to be passed. She clearly hasnt done that with this legislation yet.

On the Senate side, Senator Klobuchar, my former law school classmate, got one of her bills through her committee in the last few weeks. Another one of her bills is up for markup. Again, its not clear where thats going to go once we turn to the full floor of the Senate, and obviously theyve got a legislative clock that is ticking incredibly rapidly as we head into the midterm elections.

BRINK: Are any of these bills more likely than others to make it into law before the midterms?

PICKER: Even knowing exactly what the bills would accomplish is contested right now. Can Amazon Prime continue to function in the way that it does? I think its plausible to read this legislation as making substantial changes to the devices we have in our hands, and thats what would make it a big deal.

One issue is whether Apple can continue to provide a device that comes with Apple Music pre-installed, or with Safari pre-installed. Thats a question about who gets to design the product. Or if Apple wants to do that, do they also have to have it come with every browser in the land, and with Spotify and other music services? On this question of what you can pre-install, I think there are natural readings of these bills that would block that.

BRINK: Theres talk about the FTC pursuing these companies for unfairly restricting vendors as much as consumers is that accurate?

PICKER: Theres never been any doubt that U.S. antitrust law applies equivalently to monopolistic practices and monopsonistic practices, i.e., practices which unlawfully restrict both consumers and sellers.

It is completely fair to say that there have been many more cases brought to bear on monopoly than on monopsony, but I think youre now seeing across the U.S. administration, both DoJ and the FTC, a greater emphasis on potential monopsonistic practices.

We should be concerned about efforts by people to interfere with how markets are functioning, whether those are efforts to change whats happening as to products, the traditional focus of monopoly, or whether thats a change with regard to inputs or labor, which is the traditional focus of monopsony.

Lets not forget that each of the firms were talking about did something at the beginning which was completely valued by the public. Theres a core to these businesses that represents an American success story. Thats not to say they cant step beyond that and get in trouble, but the ability to create great products that people value, thats hard to do.

I think the administrations plan right now is: Lets test the boundaries, and well see what the court system is going to say about it.

BRINK: Do you think these companies have the ability or the will to be able to police themselves?

PICKER: Im not sure any of us are good at self-policing, I say as I reach for the next piece of cake, right? The question is: Do we think antitrust is the right tool? At its core, antitrust law is a system based on fault. Its not a system historically that is based upon mere success and being big.

U.S. antitrust laws never said being big is a problem as long as you dont abuse that power. The bills we started this conversation with, even though theyre discussed as antitrust bills, theyre much closer to a sort of public utility-regulated industries model, and thats a different approach to how we want to regulate these firms.

BRINK: One of the arguments that has been made by these companies is that it could dampen innovation and cede national security grounds to China. Is that a real threat in your mind?

PICKER: I would say that we are at our fourth flashpoint between the government, tech and innovation. Computers were created in World War II, and the government was heavily involved in that. The Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union then led to DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), the whole rise of integrated circuits, and eventually to CPUs and the like. All of that sort of emerges as part of that conflict. Thats two.

Then, in the 80s, there was much more of an economic rivalry with Japan with this fear that we were falling behind in our ability to produce chips in the way that the Japanese could. That was the third moment, and now I do think we are in the fourth such conflict. And in each of those moments, weve thought about this not only in product market terms, but about broader geopolitical questions.

I think thats the right thing to do. I hope members of Congress will make sure that they are focusing not only on United States issues, but these larger issues as well.

BRINK: Where do you think we will be in 12 months time?

PICKER: The pace of litigation is frighteningly slow. Some of these cases arent even scheduled to go to trial before 2023. The Apple case with Epic, thats in the ninth circuit, so sooner maybe. But legislation seems to me to be the faster front if 12 months is our time horizon, but maybe the window will close after the midterms.

I think theres a chance one of these bills will get through, and that would be a big deal, but I also know stuff can take a decade to get through.

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BRINK: Do you think that it would be a good idea for institutions to try to get ahead of what is happening in the tech space, such as the metaverse, and try to regulate for that, rather than playing catch up?

PICKER: The thing I say in class is you cant regulate it if you dont understand it. The next step is, you cant regulate it if were not even sure what it is.

I guess I think that getting ahead of these developments would be incredibly hard to do. I think regulators tend to work best when they have a pretty precise problem in front of them, and Im not sure if thats where we are yet.

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Is US Antitrust Action Against Big Tech Likely This Year? - BRINK

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