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Facebook, Google absorb U.S. lawmakers' jabs in rare Big Tech hearing


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Posted

Facebook, Google absorb U.S. lawmakers' jabs in rare Big Tech hearing

By Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz

 

2020-07-29T183054Z_1_LYNXNPEG6S1NH_RTROPTP_4_USA-TECH-CONGRESS.JPG

Witnesses Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Apple CEO Tim Cook are sworn-in before a hearing of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law on "Online Platforms and Market Power", in the Rayburn House office Building on Capitol Hill, in Washington, U.S., July 29, 2020. Mandel Ngan/Pool via REUTERS

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Google and Facebook took the sharpest jabs for alleged abuse of their market power from Democrats and Republicans on Wednesday in a much-anticipated congressional hearing

 

 

Facebook Inc's <FB.O> Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon.com Inc's <AMZN.O> Jeff Bezos, Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O>-owned Google's Sundar Pichai and Apple Inc's <APPL.O> Tim Cook - whose companies have a combined market value of about $5 trillion - parried a range of accusations from lawmakers via videoconference before the House Judiciary Committee's antitrust panel.

 

Though it was Bezos’ first congressional testimony, he appeared the least fazed by his grilling. Cook drew fewer barbed questions than Bezos, but handled them efficiently while Zuckerberg took the most damage, stumbling a few times when confronted with internal emails.

 

Pichai took the most heat from conservatives and he looked the worse for it, as he repeatedly told lawmakers he would be happy to look in to various situations and get back to them.

 

Unfortunately, the Big Tech hearing was decidedly low-tech. Bezos escaped questioning for about 90 minutes in what may have been a tech issue, and was caught reaching for what appeared to be a snack.

 

Poor audio quality, flat-screen televisions switching off, and chief executives appearing together as thumbnails on a large screen frustrated viewers and led to mockery of the virtual set-up on Twitter.

 

U.S. Representative David Cicilline, a Democrat and chair of the antitrust subcommittee, began by accusing Google of theft.

 

"Why does Google steal content from honest businesses?" he asked.

 

Cicilline alleged Google stole reviews from the company Yelp Inc <YELP.N> and said Google threatened to delist the company from search results if it objected.

 

Pichai responded mildly that he would want to know the specifics of the accusation. "We conduct ourselves to the highest standards," he added, disagreeing with the characterization that Google steals content from other businesses to keep users on its own services.

 

Facebook's Zuckerberg took a series of questions about the company's purchase of Instagram in 2012, and whether it was acquired because it was a threat.

 

Zuckerberg responded that the deal had been reviewed by the Federal Trade Commission and that Instagram at the time was a tiny photo-sharing app rather than a social-media phenomenon. "People didn't think of them competing with us in that space," he said.

 

The hearing marked the first time the four CEOs have appeared together before lawmakers.

 

Representative Pramila Jayapal pressed Amazon's Bezos on whether the company used data from third-party sellers in making sales decisions. In a previous hearing, an Amazon executive denied this under oath and was contradicted by a later news report.

 

Bezos answered cautiously that the company had a policy against such actions. "If we found that somebody violated it, we would take action against them," he said.

 

On the Republican side, Representative Jim Jordan accused the companies of taking a long list of actions that he said showed they try to hamper conservatives from reaching their supporters.

 

"Big Tech is out to get conservatives," he said. The companies have denied allegations of political censorship.

 

Jordan and Cicilline had a heated exchange within 30 minutes of the hearing's start, tangling over Jordan's request to allow another member of Congress to join the panel.

 

Jordan's allegations come after President Donald Trump, who has clashed with several of the biggest tech companies, on Wednesday threatened to take action against them with Executive Orders.

 

'STREET FIGHT'

CEO Cook rejected the notion there is nothing to stop Apple from raising the commissions it charges in the App Store.

 

"I disagree strongly with that," he said. "The competition for developers - they can write their apps for Android or Windows or Xbox or PlayStation. We have fierce competition at the developer side and the customer side, which is essentially so competitive I would describe it as a street fight for market share in the smartphone business."

 

In his opening remarks, Zuckerberg told lawmakers that China is building its "own version of the internet focused on very different ideas, and they are exporting their vision to other countries."

 

Cook pointed out that the fiercely competitive smartphone market includes China's Huawei Technologies Co Ltd [HWT.UL], which has been a focus of considerable U.S. national security concern.

 

A detailed report with antitrust allegations against the four tech platforms and recommendations on how to tame their market power could be released by late summer or early fall by the committee, which has separately amassed 1.3 million documents from the companies, senior committee aides said.

 

(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz in Washington; Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Paresh Dave and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Chris Sanders and Matthew Lewis)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-07-30
 
Posted

Woefully, mentally challenged congressmen (not all, but some) questioning men who have either built an empire business or climbed the ranks to lead them.  The idiots were obvious even when they were reading their prepared 'questions' or attempting making a 'statement'.

Posted

Well we know how it looks now when some of the dumbest people on the planet ask questions of 4 of the smartest on the planet. This whole ask a question and interrupt the answer format they have going is utterly retarded. Is this for real?

Posted (edited)
10 minutes ago, Cryingdick said:

Well we know how it looks now when some of the dumbest people on the planet ask questions of 4 of the smartest on the planet.

 

Smart in which way?

 

That they got away with it for years by intruding on their users privacy? ( Google & Facebook )

 

That they have investors who are so foolish that they overvalue the companies? Amazon 144 times P/E and Apple the richest phone company in the world with less than 10% market share

Edited by Susco
Posted
2 hours ago, Susco said:

 

Smart in which way?

 

That they got away with it for years by intruding on their users privacy? ( Google & Facebook )

 

That they have investors who are so foolish that they overvalue the companies? Amazon 144 times P/E and Apple the richest phone company in the world with less than 10% market share

 

You have to be pretty dim if you don't recognize that those four are more than just a tad above average in the intelligence department. 

  • Like 1
Posted
Just now, Cryingdick said:
2 hours ago, Susco said:

 

Smart in which way?

 

That they got away with it for years by intruding on their users privacy? ( Google & Facebook )

 

That they have investors who are so foolish that they overvalue the companies? Amazon 144 times P/E and Apple the richest phone company in the world with less than 10% market share

 

You have to be pretty dim if you don't recognize that those four are more than just a tad above average in the intelligence department. 

 

You must be pretty dim if you didn't get from my post that I acknowledged they are very intelligent............in defrauding their users and investors.

 

I'm surprised they didn't call in Musk, as he is in the very same league, with his creative accounting

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/tesla-bear-gordon-johnson-why-155019390.html

Tesla Bear Gordon Johnson On Why Company Is Running On 'Borrowed Time'

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