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FTC Gets Jurisdiction for Possible Facebook Antitrust Probe (wsj.com) 45

The Federal Trade Commission will lead any antitrust investigation into Facebook under an arrangement that gives the Justice Department chief oversight of Alphabet's Google, as the U.S. government gears up for scrutiny of the country's major tech companies over competition concerns. From a report: The FTC secured the rights to begin a potential investigation of Facebook and whether it has engaged in unlawful monopolistic practices as part of an agreement that allowed the Justice Department to take the reins in a Google probe, according to people familiar with the matter. The FTC and Justice Department share authority in enforcing U.S. antitrust law and at times must work out turf arrangements regarding which agency will handle what issues. FTC already has spent more than a year investigating Facebook on privacy issues related to how it handles users' data. That probe, however, doesn't focus on antitrust questions on whether Facebook is stifling competition in the digital realm. The fact that the commission formally secured jurisdiction on those issues suggests it is considering even more rigorous scrutiny of the social media giant.
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FTC Gets Jurisdiction for Possible Facebook Antitrust Probe

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  • Common carrier.... (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    If Facebook wants to be protected from liability for what it's users post, Facebook can't pick and chose what gets posted.

    Either they're a common carrier or they're not.

    (Yeah, it's really Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, but the same principle applies...)

    • Facebook is a communication platform, and does not claim immunity as they extensively police content for revenge porn, harrassment, and other bad behavior.

      It is not Facebook's job to host neo-Nazi propagnda, or the ramblings of future mass shooters.

      Facebook is not a common carrier, it is a private website, and the first amendment guarantees them the freedom to host or not host any content that they choose. It's scary how soon after Trump's election republicans have gone after our constitutionally protected

    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      Facebook can't pick and chose what gets posted.

      There is no outside authority that has any right to regulate their content. Unless they can interfere with your connection to an alternative, they certainly can decide what goes up. They have every right. They are not an ISP.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        More Moron Moderation.

        It is precisely on topic. there is no legitimate antitrust case against any content provider on the internet. You have to prove real interference. Propaganda and data mining are not.

        This is about censorship, but the morons prefer to believe the theatrics. Maybe because they are pro-censorship. This would explain what they are doing, trying to frame it as something else. They are producing a false narrative that unfortunately sells. If anything, putting antitrust and Facebook in the sam

    • There's an exception for "any action voluntarily taken in good faith to restrict access to or availability of material that the provider or user considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected;" I'd agree some of these services are really stretching the definition of "objectionable" (because you disagree with it does not make it objectionable, despite what the PC crowd has been teaching
  • ...lets let the gov't destroy FB, so the Chinese can pick up the pieces and beat us to death with them. Maybe nuke Amazon, Wikipedia, and Google too... If you thought censorship was bad before, wait 'til those commies get hold of it.

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (10) Sorry, but that's too useful.

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