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Biden Taps Another Big Tech Trustbuster (politico.com) 73

President Joe Biden has decided to nominate Lina Khan, a Columbia University legal scholar championed by anti-Big Tech activists, to the Federal Trade Commission. From a report: Along with the recent hiring of Tim Wu as an economic adviser inside the White House -- also first reported in Playbook -- the addition of Khan signals that Biden is poised to pursue an aggressive regulatory agenda when it comes to Amazon, Google, Facebook and other tech giants. An FBI agent this week was making calls to Khan's associates for her background check, the final part of the vetting process before a major administration job is officially announced. Sources confirmed Khan is headed to the FTC if she survives Senate confirmation. The addition of Khan and Wu represents a massive shift in philosophy away from the era of Barack Obama, who proudly forged an alliance between the Democratic Party and Big Tech.
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Biden Taps Another Big Tech Trustbuster

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  • She graduated 5 years ago. Her industry experience is non-existent, her life experience is entirely academic, and she has no wins to speak of. The administration knows this and selected her for optics rather than substance so they can pretend to be doing something. The Trump administration got the DOJ antitrust ball rolling. If that doesn't pick up speedb (or is stopped), the Biden administration has just granted itself PR cover for any interference it engages in.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 )

      I thought you Trump Fans wanted all the Washington Insiders (AKA People with Experience) out?
      Oh wait, it is because the other guy did it, so now it is not a good idea.

      Being an academic in a particular field doesn't mean lack of experience or skill. It means that they spent more time thinking about the problem from different angles than most people do. Also if you work in the Corporate world, do all your Bosses and CEO's... How many of them do you really look up to? (vs just suck up to them to keep your job

      • Being an academic in a particular field doesn't mean lack of experience

        Yes it does. If they have no experience, save for what they learned in college, then they're definitely inexperienced. I learned so much more actually on the job than I did in college, all academic understanding really does is give you the basics, no matter how long you've been studying it.

        This is exactly why, for example, they make doctors complete residency before they can practice. No amount of lectures or books is sufficient.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Here's his choices, pick an academic with little to no industry experience but a demonstrated ability to learn or pick a revolving door regulator who has a cushy chair waiting in someone's executive suite if she/he does a "good job" for their future employer.

      Meanwhile, I notice the doublespeak. Trump gets the anti-trust ball rolling but the same sort of action by Biden is "interference"?

  • Good. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Tuesday March 09, 2021 @10:49AM (#61140232)

    There are a LOT of companies that need to be busted up and plenty more that need to be regulated. I certainly hope Biden is going to hire someone good to head the FTC and kick some ass.

    • Re:Good. (Score:4, Informative)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Tuesday March 09, 2021 @01:57PM (#61141064)

      There are a LOT of companies that need to be busted up and plenty more that need to be regulated. I certainly hope Biden is going to hire someone good to head the FTC and kick some ass.

      A LOT of "those" companies, make up the Donor Class.

      Now you know how it's gotten this bad, and why nothing will fundamentally change.

      And that's a Biden promise.

  • the addition of Khan signals that Biden is poised to pursue an aggressive regulatory agenda when it comes to Amazon, Google, Facebook and other tech giants

    What regulatory agenda would cover:

    Amazon: Provides online shopping, streaming video, and cloud services
    Google: Search and and advertising, cloud applications and services, free cell phone OSes
    Facebook: Social media

    There is almost no overlap in those business models, besides Google and Amazon's cloud offerings. What new regulations would cover all of these business activities? This is like saying we need to regulate Sysco, McDonald's and Budweiser. Beyond all selling food and beverages, there isn't a lot of

    • Re:Regulation (Score:5, Insightful)

      by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Tuesday March 09, 2021 @10:54AM (#61140248)

      There is almost no overlap in those business models, besides Google and Amazon's cloud offerings. What new regulations would cover all of these business activities?

      Antitrust.

    • by Merk42 ( 1906718 )
      I think it's because Amazon's/Google's/Facebook's business models overlap with other, smaller companies not mentioned.
      Think of it this way, while they weren't around at the same time, it's like saying Standard Oil and "Ma Bell" didn't need any regulation because their business models didn't overlap with each other.
    • Antitrust would be nice, but the real agenda is censorship.

      Breaking up the big social platforms is not in Democrats' interests, since that would allow:

      1. More platforms to the right of the Democrats to flourish, and

      2. Dispersal makes it far harder to control the whole space. Autocrats like dealing with other autocrats, not "a marketplace of ideas."

      • Re:Regulation (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday March 09, 2021 @11:59AM (#61140448)

        Right leaning platforms asking for government intervention is the funniest thing I’ve read today. Help we’re wildly unpopular and nobody will do business with us, please government save us!

        • Right leaning platforms asking for government intervention is the funniest thing I’ve read today. Help we’re wildly unpopular and nobody will do business with us, please government save us!

          I wonder what funny things you haven't read about today, because the master lawnskeepers have determined what is and isn't allowed on the planet's turf?

          No matter what side you lean towards, this argument gets real stupid, real quick. No, it won't be "funny" when the shoe is on the other foot. It will be as sad and pathetic as watching any progressive try and make progress happen. Those that assume unpopular ideas are automatically wrong, tend to confirm why many popular ideas, are fucking asinine.

          And if

    • Most of their income is from advertising. So there seems to be about 80% overlap.
    • There is almost no overlap in those business models, besides Google and Amazon's cloud offerings.

      Keep reading until it clicks: Biden Taps Another Big Tech Trustbuster

      Will the DOJ follow through and pull out their antitrust guns? Who knows. But they're posturing for it, and that's good. Those laws exist for a reason.

  • Back in the Obama Days these Big Tech Companies pushing User Generated Content was a freeing experience. Where information can be spread without big media companies sitting in a board room deciding if your content was worthy to be watched or just too dull or unpolished to be worth the time slot.
    This was a really good thing, events that would had been blocked out because it wasn't worthy to be put on the news stations, or would conflict with their sponsors. Eg Here is a story about Company A destroying the

    • Your premise is un-American. I believe we have already decided that "misinformation" is simply something the other side disagrees with, in most cases. We are allowed, for now, our opinion. Unless your plan is to deem all Americans too stupid to make up their own minds about issues, then we have lost all that we have worked for.

      • And you are discounting the possibility of organized disinformation with no goal other than to make people like you stupider than you already are, to throw a wrench into our fucking system.

        As the person you responded to said, the problem isn't you and your stupid fucking opinion. It's the people who are driving your opinion, using you as a little fucking lemming to their ends.
        • So any issue that you deem misinformation must either be a plot organized by some entity or stupid? And you are happy to call anyone with an opinion you disagree with stupid. Based on your response to my opinion, I can see that you too have sipped on some Kool-Aid at one point or another.

          • So any issue that you deem misinformation must either be a plot organized by some entity or stupid?

            Of course not.
            Are you denying that such plots exist however? Because there's overwhelming evidence of it, including but limited to the official opinions of our intelligence services.

            And you are happy to call anyone with an opinion you disagree with stupid.

            Depends on the opinion.
            There are many opinions I disagree with that aren't stupid. Trying to fit your stupid opinions in there by default is ridiculous.

            Based on your response to my opinion, I can see that you too have sipped on some Kool-Aid at one point or another.

            See? That's an example of a stupid fucking opinion.

            There is a difference between misinformation and an opinion. You attempting to frame them as the same thing is a very sad a

            • "Are you denying that such plots exist however? Because there's overwhelming evidence of it, including but limited to the official opinions of our intelligence services."

              You mean like election tampering? I'm not denying that happened. Whether it swayed the election is anyone's guess at this point.

              Your logic is flawed because as soon as someone says anything, it's an opinion. The car is red. That's an opinion and if you talk to an artist he may correct you with "no it's crimson". So depending on who's saying

      • Maybe you've decided that ""misinformation" is simply something the other side disagrees with", but I haven't. I've seen clear evidence that what passes for 'misinformation' is the deliberate effort to deceive.

        • I have seen both truth and lies. I have seen enough to know that when politicians and big business begin to talk about censorship - let's call it what it is - we are going to lose.

  • Get William Shatner to do her public relations.
  • I think we're not paying attention enough to the beneficial simplicities and regularities we as users get out of the current near-monopolistic tech platform situation.

    It is a burden of significant extra work and uncertainty and likely failure, to have to know which cluster of little tech services would work together seamlessly for me in the absence of a vertically integrated goods-supply-hub like Amazon.

    Analogously, how would I quickly go to a single online/app place to communicate in rich-media conversatio
    • by Tom ( 822 )

      They need to propose specific rigid strong-interoperability standards

      This.

      The car industry works because all cars can drive on all roads. Because there are standards in place about size, wheel sizes and types, controls, lights and dozens of other things.

      We have the technology for systems to inter-operate. We use it in a few places - like the Web and E-Mail - though even there we've seen attempts by dominant companies to poison the waters with proprietary protocols.

      There's not technological reason why two social media sites can't work together or why messages can't be sent ac

  • Why did Big Tech support the Democrats when there were obvious clues that the Democrats would clamp down on them? I'm a foreigner with not much interest in politics of the U.S. or of even my own country, but I thought this was clear.

    So if it wasn't self interest, what was it? Altruism seems unlikely. Perhaps Big Tech was worried that most of their employees were Den aligned and thought that supporting Republicans would cause major labour problems?

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