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FTC Chair Lina Khan Says Agency Pursuing 'Mob Bosses' in Big Tech (techcrunch.com) 39

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is prioritizing enforcement actions against major technology companies that cause the most harm, FTC Chair Lina Khan said at an event. Khan emphasized the importance of targeting "mob bosses" rather than lower-level offenders to effectively address illegal behaviors in the industry. The FTC has recently launched antitrust probes into Microsoft, Open AI, and Nvidia, and has taken legal action against Meta, Amazon, Google, and Apple in recent years. TechCrunch adds: Khan said that in any given year, the FTC sees up to 3,000 merger filings reported to the agency and that around 2% of those deals get a second look by the government. "So you have 98% of deals that, for the most part, are going through," she said. "If you are a startup or a founder that is eager for an acquisition as an exit, a world in which you have five or six or seven or eight potential suitors, I would think, is a better world in which you just have one or two, right? And so, actually promoting more competition at that level to ensure that startups have you know more of a fair chance of getting a better valuation, I think would be beneficial as well."
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FTC Chair Lina Khan Says Agency Pursuing 'Mob Bosses' in Big Tech

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  • by Pseudonymous Powers ( 4097097 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @12:31PM (#64544065)
    But I don't understand. All those crimes were committed by low-level employees, acting on their own behalf. To suggest that underlings sometimes perform ill deeds at the behest of the more powerful is to violate the long-established social contract, the "code of silence" if you will, that powerful business interests have with the government agencies charged with regulating them.
    • by boulat ( 216724 )

      What are you babbling about?

      Most employees won't fart without their manager's approval, in triplicate form, signed by the manager's manager and also confirmed by HR.

      The concept that some low-level employee had an original idea and acted upon it is laughable.

      • To suggest that I might not be entirely earnest in my asinine babblings is to violate the long-established social contract of internet forum sites, which is for at least 25% of readers to accept attempts at satire at their face value, and react accordingly.
      • What are you babbling about?

        Most employees won't fart without their manager's approval, in triplicate form, signed by the manager's manager and also confirmed by HR.

        The concept that some low-level employee had an original idea and acted upon it is laughable.

        OP's talking about the fact that most bosses manage to throw underlings under the bus rather than face the repercussions of their actions.

  • 1. Allow every merger to go through
    2. Call the excessive mergers monopolistic
    3. Sue the merged companies for billions

    Profit!

    • To stop the mergers because the bubble boomers were busy with stupid ass moral panics. The bubble boomers are still busy with dumb moral panics, they're currently freaking out about drag queens and trans kids in high school sports, but there's a lot fewer of them because of how the passage of time works so the Biden administration has a bit of political power to toss around. So they're beginning to enforce antitrust law.

      Keyword beginning there's a lot more to come from this.

      The CPI in May was zero.
    • 1. Allow every merger to go through
      2. Call the excessive mergers monopolistic
      3. Sue the merged companies for billions

      Profit!

      4. Win a few cases against big companies.
      5. Lose the appeals from big companies.
      6. Revert to previous status quo.

      Since the 1982 breakup of AT&T, US anti-trust actions have been either minor or reversed. The closest was Microsoft in 2000, but that resulted in a settlement that was effectively a reversal. European actions have been relatively more impactful, but US actions in the last 40 years have been literally insignificant.

    • I donâ(TM)t think Khan has won any of those big cases she pursued yet, she is the worst FTC chair in history based on cases won. Wasnâ(TM)t it Google that recently told the judge it would be cheaper to just pay the highest possible fine they could leverage (~2M) than continue with the case? Thatâ(TM)s all she got going is pocket change for an agency that blows through millions every year just existing.

  • by alispguru ( 72689 ) <bob.bane@me.PLANCKcom minus physicist> on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @12:36PM (#64544085) Journal

    ... the FTC and/or the FCC goes after the "mob bosses" in telecom.

    The big ISPs have gotten away with consumer murder for decades, and never been seriously punished for it because they bought the right Congresscritters.

    Remember the last big broadband-for-everyone bill where the telecom companies got tens of billions to give people outside big cities broadband?
    The one where they got the bill modified to define ADSL as "broadband" so they could just keep the $$ and do little or no infrastructure work?

    • And then they didn't actually even deliver THAT to many rural customers.

      I still remember when Pacific Bell promised to bring "lite speed" DSL to ALL POTS customers by Y2000.

      • I had the "pleasure" of spending a long weekend in Durant, OK in 2010... there was no telephone service off of the main roads outside town. No cell service either, once you were about 3 miles outside town. Town was tiny. The people I was visiting had to drive into town to make a cell phone call.
    • yep, and the one before that that gave $5 billion to AT&T to do the same thing, but with no teeth, so no 'enforcement'. AT&T took the money and did nothing... or rather they donated a portion of it to re-election campaigns of several congressweasels.

      Congress actually had AT&T write that law!

      This game has been going on a long time.

  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @12:43PM (#64544099)

    Ah yes, now that they have already let all the big mergers create monopolies in vital sectors, now they're gonna start scrutinizing things with a big ol' magnifying glass to make sure no mergers are happening that might be detrimental to the public and protect an active competitive landscape in tech!

  • by WimBo ( 124634 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @12:44PM (#64544111) Homepage

    AT&T, Comcast, Lumen, (Qwest or whatever alias they are going by now) all should be included in the investigations to make any of this worthwhile.

    • Qwest isn't going by anything now. They got bought out after the CEO refused to allow the NSA to tap their cross country backbone and they drummed up some bullshit insider trading charges against him while congress does it all day every day.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        So you are saying the SEC/DOJ are wielded as weapons to attack political enemies. Got it.

      • Qwest were rightly prosecuted, not persecuted. Qwest fraud [sec.gov]
        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          That they broke the law isn't the question though. The question is were they prosecuted because they pissed of the NSA or not?

          This the problem with the current state of our democracy and our legal system. The latest bullshit the political left is pushing is that "Hunter got convicted so see see nobody is above the law" they claim.

          They expect us to just memory hole the fact he only went to trial on the gun charges because the a judge (a Trump appointee) said what Garland (who thinks he is above congression

  • ... the airports for Larry Ellison?

    Do they know that he owns a number of yachts?

  • It is easier to go after suits who stick out like blisters than to go after the "lower-level offenders" who are more numerous, cause more damage to the internet, and who are so isolated from the suits at the top that they don't give a damn what happens to them. Yeah, let's go for the easy wins!
    • well, I am no fan of the suits, they have always tried to screw me over whenever I have had to deal with them, so I say, Go After the Suits!
  • They need to go on an antitrust rampage to return American business to anything resembling open market competition.
  • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @03:59PM (#64544731)

    ...sales of pinstripe suits, fedoras, pinky rings, and Lincoln continentals skyrockets in Palo Alto.

  • True network criminals, IMHO.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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