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Facebook Businesses Government

Facebook's Co-Founder Is Now Lobbying the Government To Break Up The Company (arstechnica.com) 71

Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes isn't just idly wondering if regulators might break up the tech behemoth he helped launch. He's going on a personal tour, meeting with state and federal officials to lay out in detail the way he thinks it could be done.

Hughes has met with members of Congress, the Justice Department's Antitrust Division, the Federal Trade Commission, and the office of New York Attorney General Letitia James to make a detailed case arguing Facebook is too big for its own good, according to separate reports from The Washington Post and The New York Times. The breakup tour went public in May, when Hughes penned a lengthy op-ed in The New York Times saying his former colleague Mark Zuckerberg wielded too much power. "I'm disappointed in myself and the early Facebook team for not thinking more about how the News Feed algorithm could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders," Hughes wrote at the time. "And I'm worried that Mark has surrounded himself with a team that reinforces his beliefs instead of challenging them."

Tech and antitrust law experts Scott Hemphill and Tim Wu had already been working on a detailed case against Facebook, and they reached out to Hughes following his public turn. The trio now work together to make their case.

They're now arguing that Facebook's "serial defensive acquisitions" are preventing competition. The article points out Facebook has acquired more than 75 smaller companies over the last 15 years, and cites one negotiator who told the Economist that "Big tech firms have been known to intimidate startups into agreeing to a sale..."
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Facebook's Co-Founder Is Now Lobbying the Government To Break Up The Company

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  • Hilarious Spin (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Kunedog ( 1033226 )

    I'm disappointed in myself and the early Facebook team for not thinking more about how the News Feed algorithm could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders," Hughes wrote at the time.

    Yes, write another ten thousand articles about how the problem with Big Tech's power isn't that they're wholly leftist and intent on suppressing dissidents, but that they're not trying to manipulate and propagandize the news enough.

    • Re:Hilarious Spin (Score:4, Interesting)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday July 28, 2019 @01:58AM (#58999808)

      Indeed. The suppression of unpopular ideas by Big Tech is far more of a threat than Russian "fake news".

      Facebook should be a platform, not a gatekeeper.

      It is an exaggeration to call Chris Hughes a "co-founder". He was a beta-tester, and otherwise contributed nothing. Chris argued for keeping Facebook "Harvard only", and thought that other universities would obviously just create their own social networks.

      So he was wrong about everything, and Facebook is where it is today because he was ignored.

      I recommend that we continue to ignore him.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The world would be a better place without the proliferation of Facebook. Chris Hughes tried to save us.

    • Despite the emotional reason for this gent's dissatisfaction, he's spot on correct about the problem with Faceboot. Concentration of ownership and abusive monopoly power.

      The ghost of Thurman Arnold has been seen in Menlo Park. Get ready Faceboot Nazis, the trustbusters are coming.

    • But then, look at who owns Slashdot. Look who their Series A investors were. Chris Hughes worked for Obama. He left Facebook in 2007. He hasn't worked for the company in a decade. He is also a huge supporter of Hilarious Clinton who absolutely knows the power of FB. What is going on right now is that the Democratic elite who own all but one major news media outlet (Created by the TCC act of 1996 signed by Bill Clinton) are furious that FB wouldn't toe the line like Twitter did. Remember Jack Dorsey's perso
  • by evanh ( 627108 ) on Sunday July 28, 2019 @01:12AM (#58999716)

    I don't see how breaking the company up will do anything to fix the unfettered business model.

    It's actually the advertising that's driving all this. That's where the problem lies. Things like tracking and liking and opt-out and push tech in general.

    • A multi-pronged approach is required.

      Absolutely, corporate snooping of everybody's private data is a pernicious evil, and should be banned under criminal not civil law. AND the Big Tech monopolists should be broken up.

      Both of these are important if we want to continue as a free country with a democratic from of government.

  • So...Facebook East and Facebook West and I can't talk to family members who live across the Great Divide once they split FB in two? How do they honestly plan to do this? Split the user info databases from the advertisement branch? Split by country? That would do nothing. Facebook does ONE THING. Everyone's acting like they're Alphabet/Google. What is there to split up?
    • Pretty much all of these billion dollar tech companies start using their cash to buy other companies once they stabilize. Facebook has Instagram, an experimental AI department, Oculus Rift, an internet program in India and Africa, and that's just off the top of my head.

      The reason is this: before Sarbanes Oxeley, companies that were worth $300million would go public, and cash out that way. But SOX is so complicated it is a real disincentive to going public. So now companies in that size range prefer to b
    • In order to corner the market on social media, Faceboot bought up 75 of their competitors. Most famously Instagram and WhatsApp.

      Breaking up Faceboot means divesting it of the companies it swallowed. And restraining it from buying up the next competitor that comes along.

      • In order to corner the market on social media, Faceboot bought up 75 of their competitors. Most famously Instagram and WhatsApp.

        Breaking up Faceboot means divesting it of the companies it swallowed. And restraining it from buying up the next competitor that comes along.

        Or, you know, the competitors could simply choose not to sell to them. Crazy, right?

        • Yup, totally crazy, completely unrealistic.

          First, you're expecting companies to forgo huge profits for the sake of the public good. Nope, that's not how business works.

          Second, behind most of these so-called startups lurks the Sandhill Road money cartel. The cartel's basic model is to use disposable startups to fish for users; and when a startup has attracted enough users, merge it into the monopoly for monetization. Monopoly profits allow the cartel funded startups to engage in anti-competitive business pra

    • by xonen ( 774419 )

      You wouldn't split the user base in two. You'd split the company by function. News feed. Advertising branch. R&D. Financial services (the facecoin). Hosting. Data centers. Cabling. Self-driving cars, you name it. Yes, one split branch would deliver services to the second (or third or..), but the idea is that other suppliers could be taken into account too and hence have a more competitive market and clearer bookkeeping, as in, the departments making money are less likely to sponsor the departments loosi

      • companies that size should preferably split, and for sure not be allowed to buy any competitor in the market without permission.

        That's already the case. The problem is in agreeing about the criteria for granting permission.

    • Facebook East and Facebook West and I can't talk to family members who live across the Great Divide once they split FB in two ...

      With XMPP [wikipedia.org] this would not be a problem.

      Oh - I forgot ... Google, Facebook, etc. deprecated xmpp for their own walled gardens. These big & small tech companies don't want you to leave their walled gardens.

      People are so inert, so hopelessly dependent on the system that they will fight to protect it.

      So nothing will change ... No matter what the government or anybody else is gonna do.

      https://www.disruptivetelephon... [disruptivetelephony.com]

  • I don't know which one makes it like that but i don't think there is on group that wouldn't try to shove their believes up your ass through you head and use whatever power they have to make you behave in line with what they think is right.
    Freedom ? give me a break ! there is no such think.
  • I'm disappointed in myself and the early Facebook team for not thinking more about how the News Feed algorithm could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders,

    This is no doubt the most arrogant thing I'll read all day today. Perhaps the most arrogant thing I'll read all week... or this month...

  • If we're going to break up Facebook because it "could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders," maybe we should aim for certain cable news outlets (on both sides of the political spectrum), who are far more damaging.
  • by MadMaverick9 ( 1470565 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @12:09AM (#59004098)

    When will people get their heads out of their asses and start taking responsibility for their own actions.

    As in - stop giving your data to these companies voluntarily. Then this problem would go away all by itself. No government intervention required.

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