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Facebook Government

Facebook Leak Shows Its Preparations to Fight a Government-Ordered Breakup (engadget.com) 50

Engadget reports: Facebook is under intense regulatory pressure, and it appears to be bracing itself for the worst. The Wall Street Journal says it has obtained a document outlining Facebook's defense if the government orders a breakup that would unload Instagram and WhatsApp. The social media giant would reportedly argue that a split would be a "complete nonstarter" based on officials' past actions — or lack thereof.

According to the leak, Facebook would contend that its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp passed FTC scrutiny without objections, leading it to pour massive amounts of money into both projects as it integrated them into its operations. A breakup would require spending billions and running separate systems that reduced security and hurt the user experience, Facebook would claim.

Facebook has declined to comment on the apparent leak. In the past, it has pushed for extra regulation (albeit limited) in place of a breakup.

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Facebook Leak Shows Its Preparations to Fight a Government-Ordered Breakup

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  • Not first in line (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:17PM (#60572700) Homepage Journal

    If Facebook is broken up, it will be after Google. While Facebook's behavior is terrible, the amount of influence they exercise pales in comparison to Google. And the level of wrong doing they perform is nothing to the extreme abuse that Amazon commits to their labor force and sellers.

    I can only assume FB's plan will have plenty of advanced warning as two much bigger fish are fried.

    • Re:Not first in line (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:37PM (#60572728)

      as two much bigger fish are fried.

      I fear they're going after FB because, while big, it's a fish that still fits on the plancha. Google, Amazon, Akamai, Microsoft... are probably so big, so powerful, so well in cahoots with the government, and have managed to makes themselves so unavoidable to the various federal agencies and the military as to be virtually untouchable.

      • Facebook is not necessary to most people, but Google probably is necessary. I do not need Facebook for work. I might be a bit stuck without Google, though I know there are alternatives.

        Whatever the importance of these vast corporations, a message needs to be sent that they are not above the rule of law. I am not sure how well that will work, when the corporations have more money and better lawyers than the government.

      • ... to makes themselves so unavoidable ...

        I think Facebook is similar but NSLs mean Facebook can't talk about how much the government depends on their surveillance and of course, the government doesn't want anyone to know how intrusive (and enabling of fascism) it is.

    • It really depends on whether you think civil war is worth avoiding. The problem with Facebook is that it creates a global filter bubble and politics has gone to war on it. The obvious solution would be to put the government in charge of Facebook and change your political system to a one party system. That way you can easily avoid civil war. Breaking up Facebook and trying to do something about the abuse of filter bubbles seems far too difficult. The rich would then be permanantly in charge of the conduct of

    • Re:Not first in line (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday October 05, 2020 @08:18AM (#60573694) Homepage Journal

      Google's issues are mostly around Android and promoting their own products. There is YouTube but so far we haven't seen any real evidence of deliberate bias, only incompetence.

      Facebook on the other hand actively helps fuck up our democracies and violate our privacy. Breaking it up will be on very different grounds to Google and is really uncharted territory. Monopolies, anti-trust, we can do that but "misuse of personal data" and "threat to democracy" are afflictions of the modern age.

  • by evanh ( 627108 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:23PM (#60572708)

    Nuke the entire site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.

    • Nuke the entire site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.

      Someone on here had a nice idea a while back to load up a C-130 with horse manure and use it to bury Facebook headquarters and Zuckerburg's house. I for one welcome manure from the sky for this purpose.

      • by tsa ( 15680 )

        I would pay to see that!

        • by tsa ( 15680 )

          By the way, horse manure is not poignant enough. I would use a mixture of chicken dung and this liquid dung that many cows on farms produce.

          • By the way, horse manure is not poignant enough. I would use a mixture of chicken dung and this liquid dung that many cows on farms produce.

            Mixed with a few barrels of Liquid ASS.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      And then a replacement will take over Facebook.

  • Same old arguments (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:30PM (#60572722)

    reduced security and hurt the user experience

    Virtually all monopolies that have gotten the Sherman Act treatment have put forward the very same arguments. If anything, it almost demonstrates that FB is a monopoly.

    • by rudy_wayne ( 414635 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:38PM (#60572734)

      Unfortunately, Facebook has a pretty good argument:

      Facebook would contend that its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp passed FTC scrutiny without objections

      Over the last 20-25 years the government has completely failed to do its job and has allowed almost all mergers and acquisitions to proceed, all of which have been harmful to consumers and has resulted in a massive concentration of power into the hands of a few companies.

      • You do know that our elected critters are on the payroll of the very companies they're supposed to regulate on our behalf, right?

    • And as I have said before: “user experience” really means data harvesting and violation of privacy. Whenever they mention it, be afraid.
      • by tsa ( 15680 )

        Indeed. Your privacy is very important to many companies. They need as much of it as they can get.

  • How would one 'breakup' Facebook? All users starting with letters A-F go to Facebook1, all users G-L to Facebook2, etc.?

    Making Facebook divest Instagram, Whatsapp, etc. won't solve any meaningful problems. They'll still be ad mongers, tracking everyone and selling user data; the only change might be that advertisers would have more pricing leverage. I'm really certain that is not why the slashsnot crowd is interested in this topic.

    What, exactly, would "breaking up" Facebook look like?

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @09:46PM (#60572750)
    Facebook is NOT encouraging regulations or legislation. The CEO occasionally emits those two words in a robotic voice that's intended to be soothing for PR purposes only. Anyone who is fooled by this has an IQ well under 100. In reality, Facebook is quietly working assassinate any governmental limitations on their ability to sell ads or harvest data. That's what they do. That's how they make their money. That's why they exist. The social networking site is nothing more than an ad delivery vehicle and a honeypot to collect the data. Period.

    I'm no fan of Facebook, but I see no reason why they should be broken up if we leave Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon alone. Really? What's Facebook doing that every single other tech titan isn't? Playing dirty, buying out potential competitors and smothering them if they won't sell, integrating everything they can into their locked ecosystem... the list goes on and on.

    They're ALL doing it. There's a lot of talk about changing and updating anti-trust laws to deal with this. I'm not sure how it will work. It will break the business model of every one of the FAANGs. Maybe that would be a good thing, maybe not. Either way hoo boy there would be a lot of collateral damage. Be careful what you wish for.
    • If Microsoft, Apple, or Amazon shuttered their doors tomorrow, whole industries would potentially shut their doors the day after.

      I don't even know what Google's been up to lately, but it would not shock me at this point if they had a moon-based laser pointed at the Whitehouse.

      Compared to those guys, Facebook's an amateur. The regulatory entities that everyone else has captured and seem to be more or less immune to, might actually be able to go toe-to-toe with Zuckerberg.
      • by ytene ( 4376651 )
        if your index is solely whether or not the corporation in question has active lobbyists in (DC/London/Brussels/etc.) then it might - might - be fair to say that Facebook are amateurs compared with Apple, Google, Microsoft and Amazon.

        But please don't underestimate the power or potential for harm that Facebook have. Just think back to what Christopher Wylie has already explained Cambridge Analytica were able to do with a tiny fraction of the data that Facebook hold.

        Put it like this: based on their analy
        • I'm absolutely no fan of Zuck. However, here's a short summary of the current guy's resume:

          Failed businessman (inherited 500 mil, grew it to 800 mil in 2 decades. WAY below average)
          Serial liar (verified)
          Doesn't seem to care he's caught at lying or is incapable of perceiving it. Either way, pretty bad.
          Shamelessly nepotistic
          Barely capable of reading
          Incapable of holding an intelligent conversation.


          The list goes. Somehow, half the country is perfectly fine with this.

          In any case, I'm think
          • by ytene ( 4376651 )
            I'm not entirely sure if you're missing or helping make the point.

            The "current guy" got to be President thanks in large part to wholesale voter manipulation. Negative ads kept thousands of potential Democratic voters away from the polls. Lies and spin were able to nudge un-decided's in favour of the current guy.

            The result? The biggest national-scale cluster-#### since records began...
  • by stabiesoft ( 733417 ) on Sunday October 04, 2020 @10:06PM (#60572780) Homepage
    Maybe we could put a sin tax for using facebook kind of like we tax cigs and alcohol. I hear using FB is addictive, and I suspect not good for you.
    • by tsa ( 15680 )

      I’d rather get a slice of the money FB earns bedause of me. 90% would do nicely.

  • The real problem is users don't own their social graphs. Splitting Facebook up wouldn't fix this. In the same way SMTP provides a standard for email that allows multiple platforms to flourish, we need to move to open standards like ActivityPub [wikipedia.org] for social networks, along with account portability between platforms. Legislation is probably required to get us there. See Social Network Interoperability on RegulateFacebook [regulatefacebook.org] for more details.
    • I completely agree. Saying Facebook can't own Instagram is like saying GE can't sell aircraft engines. However, requiring membership to obtain the benefit of interacting with members while having market share that results in there being no other meaningful choice starts to look like this [lexology.com] case. I think a case could be made for enforced federation.
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      Don't be silly. It's only evil when other countries do it. Just like breaking encryption.
      We're the good guys, see? /s

  • Regulations ALWAYS help big companies. Can the little guy afford to comply with a mountain of useless paperwork and various esoteric standards compliance?

    As for breakup .. I don't agree with it -- users will be severely inconvenienced when suddenly they can't contact their friends because they got assigned to a different service. If you don't like your privacy invaded don't use those platforms. That said, users should voluntarily ditch WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, Apple iMessenger, Skype, Telegram etc. and

  • Like Baby Bells, would be a good investment in the long run. Of course the CEO of the giant Amoeba never wants to split, but it's great for everybody else. Also, "Baby FaceBook" sounds like a gangster, which is just perfect.

  • by Tom ( 822 )

    spending billions and running separate systems that reduced security and hurt the user experience, Facebook would claim.

    one partially true claim and two complete falsehoods. So, par for the course in modern politics.

    I get more and more disgusted by the world we live in, but maybe it's always been like that and I just become more aware of it.

  • After Amazon (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rxmd ( 205533 ) on Monday October 05, 2020 @03:09AM (#60573242) Homepage
    If there's one such monopoly that needs breaking up, it's Amazon. You can even split them nicely: marketplace, hosting services and ad services.
  • by MemoryDragon ( 544441 ) on Monday October 05, 2020 @04:23AM (#60573338)

    They are on the road of becoming the perfect mass data collection juggernout regarding lots of intimate aspects of their users lives.
    Facebook knows that and dumps serious money into it because of that, and hence the change of terms of service in the direction of mass data collection.

  • How would someone even break up Facebook? Yes selling off subsidiaries would help, but Facebook itself, where do you draw the line? Each division within the company overlaps so much onto other sections that inter-relations are like a bawl of yarn. There is not clear cut and dry way to do this without destroying the business as a whole. But in the end I agree Facebook, along with Amazon, Apple, and Google need to be broken up.
    • Here's a thought: just tell Zuck and his buddies, "You created this tangled mess in the first place. You figure out how to untangle it, or the money train stops at the next station".

      I bet if they saw they couldn't BS their way out of the situation, they'd have a workable solution on the table in a matter of weeks, if not sooner.

  • by WolfgangVL ( 3494585 ) on Monday October 05, 2020 @02:55PM (#60574956)

    Tax data at rest. You want to build a massive trove of personal information on every man woman and child on the planet, and then charge tickets to advertisers--- fine. It's to late to stop that train, and ending the practice would put far to may people out of work.

    Taxing the underlying data on the other hand, now this de-incentives every clown and pony show on the internet from collecting every scrap of user data they can, it assigns a monetary value to the data-sets the giants have duped the dumb into providing, it forces declaration of exactly what is in these data-set (and if they are inferred, implied, or actual hard data points) and finally gets the giants paying taxes. All wins for the people.

    We know the more data you have, the more valuable it becomes, and the fresher is it, the better it tastes. Data sets are extremely valuable assets. It's time we start treating them as such.

    Tax the data, and attach criminal liability to leaking it.

    Or we can just allow personal people to claim ownership of their own data and take it back. Fat chance of that.

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