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FTC Chair Khan: Stop Monopolies Before They Happen (axios.com) 40

FTC chair Lina Khan is hunting for evidence that Microsoft, Google and Amazon require cloud computing spend, board seats or exclusivity deals in return for their investments in AI startups. From a report: At a Friday event, Khan framed today's AI landscape as an inflection point for tech that is "enormously important for opening up markets and injecting competition and disrupting existing incumbents." The FTC chair offered Axios' Sara Fischer new details of how she's handling a market inquiry into the relationship between Big Tech companies and AI startups, in an interview at the Digital Content Next Summit in Charleston, S.C.

In handling the surge in AI innovation and its impacts on the broader tech and media landscape, Khan said she aims to tackle monopoly "before it becomes fully fledged." She said the FTC is looking for chokepoints in each layer of the AI tech stack: "chips. compute, foundational models, applications." Khan said she's also paying close attention to vertical integration -- when players look to extend dominance over one tech layer into adjacent layers -- or when they attempt acquisitions aimed at solidifying an existing monopoly. That includes any potential integration between Sam Altman's nascent chip project and OpenAI, though she said she welcomes chip competition.

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FTC Chair Khan: Stop Monopolies Before They Happen

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Put realistic limits on patents/copyrights.. and let's have compulsory licensing! But we'll never have it, because industry puppets always win reelection

  • In the past, they would do things like, "We'll invest and hey here's our product/service at a rate you simply can't refuse!"

    As a startup, most money is good money so if FANG is going to invest under reasonable terms -and- give you cheap cloud or whatever, also, who would turn that down?

    More like "The Google cloud rate is 75% lower because they're a funder so we might as well use their cloud" than "required".

    It's still probably illegal but it isn't "required" per se is my guess.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Tuesday February 13, 2024 @04:43PM (#64237400)
    this seems to be a strangle-it-in-it's-crib strategy. Which is a bad idea. Thoughtful regulation is great, but the US should leave the anti-capitalist policies to the poorer European states and all those countries caught in the middle income trap. They can stay poor if they want, why should we join them?

    Economy isn't everything, but it matters a great deal. If this type of attitude prevails, the next generation of MS, FB, Tesla, SpaceX, Apple and the entire silicon valley construct will be based in some country other than the US. Or they won't form at all, because there isn't any country that can replicate the US economy. Not yet, at least, and probably not anytime soon.
    • Back in the '70s and '80s when antitrust law was significantly more likely to be enforce. I don't see any particular reason why we can't have that.

      There is nothing more anti-capitalist then shutting down competition. Capitalism without competition is just monarchy with extra steps
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Quality of life and general happiness are much higher in those "poor European states". We are doing just fine with our regulations, thanks.

      This is how you make capitalism work for the people. Set up the rules so that monopolies can't form in the first place, and there is always competition to drive innovation and put downward pressure on prices. As an example, most Europeans have a choice of many different ISPs because the networks were forced to unbundle, where as in the US most people seem to be stuck wit

      • To be clear, I’m not referring to France, Britain and Germany. Those places have first-world economies that aren’t quite US-level but damn close. I’m referring to places like Albania and Bulgaria. In places like that, life isn’t awful (for the most part) but it ain’t great either. Crap on the US all you want. Money has it’s advantages.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          France and Germany are both much better places to live than the US, by any reasonable measure.

  • Every startup, and many businesses of many sizes, try to lock in their customers to their product or service. It's not a problem until they gain too much market dominance. But how do you predict which of these companies are going to grow to such a size that their strategies will become anticompetitive?

  • I think they are some 40 or 50 years too late for that.
  • Apple, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft-Activation would be the latest.
  • Lina Khan has always been a diehard libertarian playing 4-dimensional chess. By taking so many unwinnable cases to court, she has turned an agency which had a lot of soft power and completely defanged it. Every lost case is another legal precedent clarifying the limits of what the FTC can do. I am her biggest fan and I think that she should get a promotion and a lifetime appointment where she gets to rotate between leading each government agency for a year or so, so that we may finally starve the beast.

  • The attitude is something I find weird. Monopolies, in and of themselves, are not bad. They are only bad if they are exploited to harm their customers. Assuming that any type of monopoly must be killed off is not only pretty unproductive, but seems ignorant on the face of it.

    There are many regions of the country where there is now only one surviving hospital. So they are a monopoly - do we need the FTC to come in and close them? Just because they have no competition? That would be ridiculous.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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