Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Facebook Google Apple

Should We Break Up the Tech Giants? Not if You Ask the Economists Who Take Money From Them (fastcompany.com) 127

This week's FTC hearings on the growing power of companies like Amazon, Facebook, and Google only included economists who have taken money, directly and indirectly, from giant corporations that have a stake in the debate. From a report: Amid growing concern over the power of such behemoths as Amazon, Google, Facebook, and other tech giants, in recent months there's been a bipartisan push for better enforcement of antitrust rules -- with even President Trump saying in August that their size and influence could constitute a "very antitrust situation." The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has launched its most wide-ranging study of corporate concentration in America in more than 20 years with a series of hearings being held around the country. Chairman Joseph Simons, a practical enforcement-minded leader, launched the hearings by expressing concern over the growing problem of monopoly, which is now found in nearly every sector of the economy. "I approach all of these issues with a very open mind," said Simons, "very much willing to be influenced by what I see and hear."

But there's a problem. The FTC organized these hearings so that Simons and the public would be hearing from many economists who have taken money, directly or indirectly, from giant corporations. For example, on Monday, the FTC convened a panel titled "The Current Economic Understanding of Multi-Sided Platforms" to look specifically at the most dynamic and dangerous set of concentrated economic actors, the big tech platforms. Every single one of the economists who testified had financial ties to giant corporations. One example is David Evans, the chairman of the Global Economics Group. Evans scoffed at the danger of platform monopolies. He indicated that the question of "whether Facebook and Google and Amazon are monopolies, it's all interesting, it's great to read in the New York Times," but it's "not all that relevant" to the practice of antitrust. His firm has taken money directly from Microsoft, Visa, the large investment bank SIFMA, and the Chinese giant tech giant Tencent. Another example is Howard Shelanski, a partner at Davis Polk. Shelanski is more enforcement-minded, but he expressed caution, testifying that we don't know enough for antitrust enforcers to understand whether powerful technology companies hold unassailable market positions. Shelanski pointed to his own children, saying that they've stopped using Facebook because it's uncool. As it turns out, his law firm's clients include Facebook, as well as Comcast, and Chinese search giant Baidu.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Should We Break Up the Tech Giants? Not if You Ask the Economists Who Take Money From Them

Comments Filter:
  • by Falos ( 2905315 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @09:59AM (#57503772)

    >ask the industry
    Seems like wasted steps. Just write BUT INNOVATION on a sign and hold it up when necessary.

  • Why are such people even consulted? And screw 'economists',they are the among the most useless bunch of experts out there. Break 'em up,specially google and facebook!
    • Google's search algorithm business should be nationalized, its patents freed. Then their ad network would be much less offensive.

      Facebook is different. We would need a magic-box-software install from which non-tech people could publish their own content, then a .torrent-based publicization method. It would end up similar to Newsgroups, but the security & trust problems are significant ("magic").
      • Let Facebook have to let their users interact with other similar sites.For example if we guys start slashbook,we should be able to semd a friend request to Zuckerberg.
        • ^^ That's the whole issue: Facebook is a closed platform. Use open protocols, then make your platform have value over others. They did it backward.
      • IMO facebook isn't really that complicated to redo... technically it's already done. Diaspora more or less already does this. In short, it works like e-mail. Any group can make their own smallish group of servers, users can register at them. In short it more or less works exactly lie facebook in terms that you just go to a webpage, register and set things up. You get an account more or less like "Username@domain.com"... your account is hosted by that domain. The only thing that may be slightly more complica
        • The real issue isn't getting the service as practical as facebook, IMO it's already there.

          Well, you're wrong. Critical social-mass requires an ease-of-use that is equivalent to FB's. Ease of use is what hooked people. Unfortunately, there's probably not any money in solving this problem.

          • I don't see where you are getting at in terms of that. I see no noteworthy difference in the time or difficulty of creating an account on say pluspora.com, versus making one on facebook.com. As far as I can see, the only increase of difficulty is on facebook most people already have an account they made 5 years ago, so setup is moot, 2. everyone they want to talk to is already on facebook. If you took pairs of 12 year olds that have access to e-mail and basic mouse/keyboard understanding, but don't have
            • The difference is that unless the people you want to connect to are also on the same platform it's useless.

              That's exactly what Google found out with Google+. No one uses Google+ because none of the people they want to connect with are on Google+. Businesses don't have Google+ pages because most of the customers they want to attract aren't on Google+. No one goes to Google+ to view a business page because the chances are the business they are interested in isn't on Google+.

              Critical social mass is everything.

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @10:12AM (#57503838)

      Break 'em up,specially google and facebook!

      Under what context? Just because you don't like them? Because they're too big and successful? They're not really monopolies- and yes, they do abuse their power with anti-competitive behaviours at time, but the courts slap them when they do. I don't see any legal justification to break them up.

      "I don't like them" isn't a good reason.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        No, but "too big and successful" is. And "they do abuse their power with anti-competitive behaviours" is.

        After all, it was for those same reasons that Bell telephone and GM were broke up. Even though Ford and Chevy existed.

        • Too big and successful isn't.

          Abuse their power definitely is though, if this is actually believed.

        • No, but "too big and successful" is. And "they do abuse their power with anti-competitive behaviours" is.

          After all, it was for those same reasons that Bell telephone and GM were broke up. Even though Ford and Chevy existed.

          When was GM broken up? Do you have more information on that? I know they've dropped some of their less successful brands (Ford dropped Mercury, and Chrysler dropped Plymouth- so GM isn't the only company to drop brands).

          I'm not aware of the government breaking up GM (Chevy IS part of GM).

      • If they cannot be broken up under tge current laws then I am of the opinion thye must then be changed,for Google has a monopoly of search engines and FB on the social network scene. They have done more harm than good and are already far too embedded into the life of ther average individual. This isnt about laws,but public health.
        • If they cannot be broken up under tge current laws then I am of the opinion thye must then be changed,for Google has a monopoly of search engines and FB on the social network scene. They have done more harm than good and are already far too embedded into the life of ther average individual. This isnt about laws,but public health.

          If we're redefining "monopoly" to mean >60% of a market, then the anti-trust lawyers are going to be busy for the next century.

          By that definition:

          Raytheon is too big.
          Lockheed Martin is too big.
          Boeing is too big.
          Kraft Heinz is too big.
          General Mills is too big.
          Procter & Gamble is too big.
          Dow Du Pont is too big.
          GlaxoSmithKline is too big.
          Walmart is too big.
          News Corp is too big.
          Walt Disney is too big.
          NBC Universal is too big.
          Comcast is too big.
          General Electric is too big.
          Bank of America is too big.
          Adobe

          • Thanks for compiling a list of companies many of whom should be broken up. But pretending, as surely you know, that corporation break-up for monopolistic practices is the only remedy possible is deception.

            Also your phrasing "has a >60% marketshare in something" is telling. When a diversified corporation (GE, say) has a monopoly position in some significant market, only that portion of the corporation needs to addressed, possibly by divesting in part of that business -- micro-breakup if you will.

            Observati

      • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @10:34AM (#57504002) Journal

        "I don't like them" isn't a good reason.

        What? Have you been living under a rock?

        "I don't like them" is now considered a great reason for just about anything! Evidence be damned!

      • Just my opinion, but "they are too big" should be enough of a reason to break a company up. With that amount of money and power, they have the resources of a nation state. They can bribe, er, sorry, lobby their way into anything they like, so they are practically immortal.
    • I think some portion of the field of economics is actually just "capitalism justification" -- it builds theories that confirm that the past behavior of successful firms is "good economics" and encourages that behavior in the future, disregarding or minimizing the externalities or opportunity costs. Economists also love to cling to their claims of being a science and ignore the human/moral/ethical problems of "good" economics. This isn't to say that all economics is worthless or that all economists are cor
  • This isn't necessarily my view on it.
    However Economist who theories seem to favor the big companies, may choose to work for such companies.
    Economist working with big companies may see and realize things that other may not notice.

    That being said, we should listen to their explanation, however take it with a grain of salt knowing that their self interest is towards getting paid by such a company.

    • That being said, we should listen to their explanation, however take it with a grain of salt knowing that their self interest is towards getting paid by such a company.

      In a similar move, the Pope* has assembled a council of experts to advise on the sex scandal coverups in The Roman Catholic Church . . . consisting of convicted pedophiles.

      * Not you, Ratzo, the other guy.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      I think the problem isn't that there are economists making arguments in favor of these companies and working for firms that do work for them, but instead that they seem to be the only people at the table.

      I would expect paid experts, the whole point is find people who can make a convincing argument for why your solution is better than other proposed ones.
  • 1. Eliminate corporate personhood. 2. Drag the C-level out into the street, hang them from lamp posts, and hand their employees sticks to beat them like pinatas. Don't worry I'm sure everyone loves them and someone will cut them down. Maybe. Probably. Well, okay, probably not, but it was a thought. 3. Watch wages grow like they did after the French dragged their aristofucks out into the street. Funny, they were cool with wages rising after that shit.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        People tend to forget that 'corporate personhood' is also the reason companies can do things like pay rent, hand out paychecks, and order supplies.
      • On the other, that exact same thing is what reduces risk so that progress can go forward and enrich all of humanity with bountiful product.

        LOL, right - before Citizens United, there was no innovation or progress, because corporations weren't legally people.

        Seems legit.

        the "poor" today in 1st world nations are still richer than the richest person 200 years ago.

        Not even close. The "richest person" in 1818... was still fucking rich, even by modern standards. Hell, it was probably a king somewhere.

      • I'm all about nuance. Hey, I got another idea. Let's keep corporate personhood and let the corporate "people" be subject to criminal penalties like actual people. Corporation accidentally kills someone? Manslaughter. Corporation kills a few dozen folks, then it gets the death penalty. BTW, commenters, you guys are high or something. Citizens United was about removing limits on corporate donations to political campaigns. However, Corporate Personhood goes back to Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railro [wikipedia.org]
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yes we should break them up because it will benefit Russia and China.

  • No company, tech or otherwise, should grow to the point of eliminating the value of private enterprise.

    Companies that grow too fast or too powerful will implode, destroying the market beyond them. Nobody licensed them to be surrogate fragmentation grenades.

    Evolution, adaptation, awareness - these should be emphasized. Profit should not. Profit motives are the prime cause of failure, not success.

    Good businesses, like good houses, should last 500 years.

  • Breaking up the tech companies isn't going to help because they're not a monopoly in the sense that they're the only game around. You have a freedom to use ANY social network you wish. There's alternatives to Facebook, there's alternatives to Twitter, there's alternatives to YouTube. The problem here is kind of a reverse monopoly.

    Instead of a traditional monopoly where there is one company and everyone is forced to use that one. You have one company that everybody uses, to the exclusion of everything else.

    F

    • by Hillie ( 63573 )

      I forgot to explain the thing I said about group forums and stuff.

      So let's say you tell someone switch from FB to something else.. Well I follow XYZ fashion YouTuber or tech YouTuber or tech influencer whatever. I belong to XYZ gym. All these places use FB Groups to communicate with each other.

      If someone deletes their FB account they cannot use those groups. But if they keep it and join another social network, it becomes like IM in the pioneer era of the Internet where there were like 1217174987 different I

    • by t0rkm3 ( 666910 )

      I think that you're right that the purpose of breaking a monopoly might not really work in this situation. There is no physical link to pivot around that creates greater friction for the competitors. All of the market resistance is created by exposure.

      I think this better compared to early radio market monopolies, where free speech was demonstrably abrogated by tacit collusion of the radio networks. This resulted in the FCC requiring certain content or content types to be carried. In this case I think that t

      • by t0rkm3 ( 666910 )

        Replying to my own post:

        I should definitely proofread more, but switching from coding to wording and back apparently made my brain clutch stick.

        Please excuse the clumsy phrasing.

      • by Hillie ( 63573 )

        I have to say I disagree about the Kavanaugh thing, but on the notion of "Don't be evil" I agree. But the problem is that "evil" is a subjective notion.

        On that though I think part of what allowed the current situation to exist is the notion of honor in IT.

        I can't speak for everyone only myself and everyone I have encountered in the IT world. We always had this kind of honor. You have access to peoples' home directories, all their files, all their personal information. You do not look at that information, yo

        • by t0rkm3 ( 666910 )

          Can you be more specific as to why you disagree on the Kavanaugh example?

          Fact: Harry Reid was leading the Senate (Joe BIden as VP) when the rule was changed.
          Fact: The R's would have not had the votes to approve Kavanaugh, therefore they would have had to pick someone who appealed to the D's, who de-facto would have to be more leftist.

          What is my logical error?

          • by Hillie ( 63573 )

            Well I would say that your error would be in suggesting that someone who would be more leftist would be better. The left is ruining this country with their radicalism.

            I'm not familiar with those alleged facts.

            What I mean by the "Kavanaugh example" and what I thought you were talking about was the Christine Blasey Ford fiasco. In which there was absolutely no corroborating evidence to support Ford's claims of sexual assault. Then the democrats insane "Believe All Women" stance which comes right out of the ra

  • We need to transform Internet-based services, chat, blogs, news (aka facebook, whatsapp, instagram, twitter etc.) into decentralized peer to peer services. Key for this transition is IPv6 because it enables us to give every human a set of personal IP addresses. For anonymization, we can use tor like overlays. Of course we need IPv6 routing without NAT.

    • We need to transform Internet-based services, chat, blogs, news (aka facebook, whatsapp, instagram, twitter etc.) into decentralized peer to peer services. Key for this transition is IPv6 because it enables us to give every human a set of personal IP addresses. For anonymization, we can use tor like overlays. Of course we need IPv6 routing without NAT.

      You also need high speed symmetrical connections. Given that the majority of the money spent on the Internet is spent by people with radically asymmetrical connections under the thumb of companies with zero effective competition and a natural monopoly, this isn't going to change, and none of those services will ever be decentralized.

      Quite aside from the fact that running Internet-facing services is technically difficult without getting pwned. How many consumer machines are part of botnets? To a first app

    • So, NAT is too expensive/complex to get right, but Tor is fine?

  • I would be amenable to breaking up the tech giants, but only we break up the cable monopolies first. The tech giants are a problem, yes, but not as much of a problem to everyday people as the fact that they're being exploited mercilessly by att&t and comcast. If you're going to break up anyone, you need to think about them first.

  • by Paul Pierce ( 739303 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @11:37AM (#57504546) Homepage
    where a virtual company with a free product is going to use their powers as a monopoly to affect my life? If you think that facebook, which is a voluntary, needs to be broken up because it's too big than you've got some screws loose. No one is forced to use it (hopefully), other social media exists and is allowed to be created whenever by whomever, and it actually increases in value the larger it gets. A town owned facebook is useless.
    • No one is forced to use it (hopefully),

      I mean, as a condition for some jobs or to work at some companies. And then all the services that assume you have a FB account. For instance, if you want to use Tinder, it requires a facebook account. And then all the companies that use FB's authentication instead of rolling their own....

  • The govt should be broken up first. It has proven to be corrupt, inefficient and a poor steward of the environment.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

Working...