Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google United States Politics

Poll Shows Bipartisan Support For Tech Antitrust Action (axios.com) 51

About half of Americans on both sides of the aisle back the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit against Google, while fewer than a third oppose it, according to a new poll from progressive groups Demand Progress and Data for Progress shared exclusively with Axios. From a report: There's a growing pile of evidence that regulatory action against Big Tech has bipartisan support, as state and federal antitrust action circles companies like Google and Facebook. While there are many party-line splits on tech policy issues like content moderation, privacy and misinformation, more policymakers and average Americans than ever agree tech is too big and powerful. Winning antitrust suits represents a massive lift for the government and passing new antitrust legislation is hard. In an online survey of 979 likely voters polled by Demand Progress and the Demand Progress Education Fund from October 24-25 (with a margin of error of +-3.1 percentage points), 48% said they strongly or somewhat support the DOJ's lawsuit. 32% strongly or somewhat oppose it. The numbers were fairly consistent across both parties, with 52% of Republicans supporting the suit, compared to 49% of Democrats. 26% of Republicans polled opposed it, while 32% of Democrats did.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Poll Shows Bipartisan Support For Tech Antitrust Action

Comments Filter:
  • Article seems to go back and forth between them. I also find it odd that Apple is never mentioned in any of these.
    • The right doesn't care about Apple because their primary reason for these antitrust actions is that they're angry with the censorship of "conservative" content (read: blocking what European nations might call hate speech), and Apple doesn't run a social media company, and their CEO hasn't made an enemy of the Dear Orange Leader.

      The left wants antitrust actions because monopolies and oligopolies are bad (news at 11), and in this regard Apple is a top offender at least on par with the others, but the left isn

      • by thereddaikon ( 5795246 ) on Wednesday October 28, 2020 @11:16AM (#60658194)

        Careful, your bias is showing.

        Apple's largest sins are

        1: Their anticonsumer behavior in terms of reparability. Sadly neither party cares about right to repair. Its something you hear tech savvy individuals talk about and libertarians throw around but it has effectively zero mainstream traction. Be nice if it did but politicians don't give a fuck.

        2: Their willingness to do business with the CCP and use slave labor. This one will become a bigger and bigger issue and get them in more trouble and time goes on. Anti-China sentiment is growing

        • Valid points, but Apple ruling developers with an iron fist through their app store is pretty damn monopolistic IMO. Google doesn't exert that kind of control, sideloading on Android is easy.

          It's like seeing an alternate history of what might've happened in the PC world if there were no IBM clones.

          • That's fair. Not sure how I forgot about the App Store. I blame the coffee machine being slow this morning.

          • I can't any negative reason with the apple store.
            I also don't like apple.

            It all fall's under the terms which they play the game,
            they try very hard to have a safer than expected
            computing environment, and to play in that game you
            need to work within those rules and sell at a service fee
            33% or so.

            You could also have people self load, and apple will happily
            tell you that you can, you also run the risk of the software
            having less security that expected.

        • Through little fault of their own they have near monopolies in important market segments like non data mining mobile phones and closely integrated hardware/software solution computers.

          Android and Windows are only competition in a loose sense. They are mostly picking up crumbs in the consumer market at this point, diminishing crumbs. Were Google to get broken up Android would be dead entirely in one or two years.

          The massive scale required for a competitor with the same level of vertical integration to get of

          • Through no fault of their own? So Google and Facebook just slipped up an accidentally bought up all their competitors?
            It is true though that to deliver to businesses cheap, effective targeted advertising you need data on everyone, which encourages scale and inhibits competition.

            The media has been claiming that everything tech does is evil, even the stuff that doesn't do any harm and gives people great services. So of course you have bipartisan support for unspecified measures against no one in particular

    • Article seems to go back and forth between them. I also find it odd that Apple is never mentioned in any of these.

      Well, that's rather easy to understand. Apple is obviously a Democratic organization, and therefore is the media darling of the MSM.

      Microsoft? Hmmm, I dunno...kinda smells like a Republican in here...

      (Amazon just quietly sits in the corner watching all, as an extension of the NSA/CIA. Nothing to see here folks...nothing to see...)

    • by Inglix the Mad ( 576601 ) on Wednesday October 28, 2020 @11:09AM (#60658160)
      They say "Big Tech" because it's nameless and easier to fill in what you think "Big Tech" is in your brain. When they phrase the question using "Big Tech" instead of a company name, you're more likely to support the antitrust action because you'll fill in "Big Tech" to match your perceptions. Get down in the weeds and start saying "Google", "FaceBook", or "Oracle" in the question and you'll get more divergent responses.
      • Hi .. do you mind being masturbated together? write me here ==>> http://gg.gg/mrfrv [gg.gg]
      • Get down in the weeds and start saying "Google", "FaceBook", or "Oracle" in the question and you'll get more divergent responses.

        What evidence do you have to back this up? Because this particular poll seems to directly contradict your claim. It has several questions which specifically only mention certain companies, and other questions that only mention "large tech companies", and there is no definitive divide in responses amongst the two types. It honestly seems like you only read the headline and nothing else.

        • Polling theory. Nate Silver, and other statisticians, can likely explain it far better. Also, many online polls are utter garbage with "gamed" results. Take any online poll results with a shaker, not a pinch, of salt. The actual poll doesn't split things apart either. You don't see them say "Google" you seem them conflate "Google and Amazon" or "FaceBook, Google, and Twitter" meaning that, via bias people will choose the more restrictive answer if they have dislike one of the companies.

          https://www.pewres [pewresearch.org]
  • When you have megacorps that got more powerful than the government, they might stop listening to it.

  • The poll sampled "979 likely voters". I'm pretty sure that isn't really indicative of the opinion of the entire country. Furthermore, Demand Progress, while an asset to the online community, is not really an unbiased source for a survey like this.

    • The poll sampled "979 likely voters". I'm pretty sure that isn't really indicative of the opinion of the entire country. Furthermore, Demand Progress, while an asset to the online community, is not really an unbiased source for a survey like this.

      It's a poll of people so lonely and bored they are willing to talk to strangers on the phone and answer dumb questions.
      Do you even answer the phone when you don't recognize the number?

  • Biden wins no antitrust actions
    Biden loses might be antitrust actions

    Really does not matter much, the only reason this is being talked about is big tech and the swamp have not agreed on a price yet and all sides are posturing.

    Be sure to Vote!
  • Unfortunately it's just the support among normal people. What's the support among the ruling class?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • 1. Guy gets suckered into moving his retail business to Amazon Fulfillment.

      There's his mistake

      2. Startup uses GCP

      That's their mistake.

      3. Apple

      There's your mistake.

      It's not a monopoly if you can just NOT USE their shitty products. Just refuse. Problem solved.

      • mostly valid,
        fortnite I think has it's own installer for android and apple
        and the most popular games have it I think

  • People draw the wrong conclusions from Polls. The findings are always HIGHLY in line with the sample group that is polled: people who take polls . . .
  • Do you think this might be a good idea before or after the Facebook Supreme Court starts to get taken seriously as a real court? Big tech has long ago entered the oligarchy realm and they damn well know it too. They have larger economies than entire nation states. They have more power than any company in history and have no qualms about abusing their power. Why would anybody be surprised that people want to see anti-trust action taken against them?

    Just because you like the fact that they are acting against

  • Slashdot's editors were just claiming that antitrust action against Google was politically motivated retribution by the Trump administration. Suddenly it is revealed that public support is bipartisan. These narratives clash.

Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer

Working...