(June 10): Investors were caught off guard by the sudden US assault on technology giants last week, but behind the scenes, the industry’s biggest companies have been preparing for this moment of reckoning for months.
They have hired lawyers and built up their lobbying shops in response to antitrust investigations that have been well under way in the European Union, and which are just now getting started in Washington.
People close to the companies say they have long anticipated US probes. And while these tech giants will need to bolster their defences for added scrutiny closer to home, Amazon.com, Alphabet’s Google, Apple and Facebook all have been working publicly and behind the scenes for months to make their cases for why they help competition, rather than harm it, and already have formidable teams in place.
As news of the federal and congressional probes roiled the companies’ shares last week, lawyers and executives working for Amazon, Facebook and Google were taking a wait-and-see approach, according to people familiar with the situation.
Google has not discussed with the Justice Department (DOJ), which is set to investigate the company, details about what antitrust officials will focus on, one of the people said. The search giant, for its part, has in the past faced intense antitrust challenges in the US and elsewhere, and already has a playbook for dealing with them.
The move towards formal investigations, coupled with a new effort from lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee to look at antitrust violations by the tech giants, is a clear escalation from the political rhetoric of the past year, led by US President Donald Trump.
“Trump’s pretty clearly made some comments about this,” says Rob Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a think tank that lobbies against excessive tech regulation. “Over the next 18 months, you’re going to see the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and DOJ certainly be making a lot more noise.”
The action of dividing up the jurisdiction itself shows the agencies are serious about investigating the companies in a real way, Atkinson says, and shows that criticism of the tech giants has filtered down to the policy level at agencies such as the FTC and DOJ.
The companies have been staffing their in-house legal teams with numerous antitrust lawyers who served in government. Amazon last year hired Bryson Bachman, a former counsel to Makan Delrahim, the head of the DOJ’s antitrust division. The former head of the division’s San Francisco office, Kate Patchen, left for Facebook last year.
Google has long had a deep bench on antitrust. In-house lawyers include Rob Mahini, who came from the FTC in 2012, and Stewart Jeffries, who was an antitrust counsel for the House Judiciary Committee until 2011, giving them ample time to hone their arguments in favour of the internet giant’s business model. They have also been stepping up spending in Washington. Google, Amazon and Facebook set company records for lobbying spending in 2018 as scrutiny of Big Tech intensified, according to Senate disclosures.
The tech giants were already coming under pressure for issues including Russian campaign meddling, data breaches, efforts to draft a tough federal privacy law and to make tech companies responsible for the content disseminated by their services.
Amazon, the Seattle-based leader in e-commerce, has worked mostly behind the scenes in an effort to contain the antitrust conversation, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Amazon has opted against engaging in public Twitter spats with the likes of Senator Elizabeth Warren, a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination for 2020 who has proposed breaking up big tech companies as part of her campaign, one of the people says.
Instead, Amazon representatives visit lawmakers individually, often bringing small-business owners from that legislator’s state or district to speak about how Amazon is helping them grow, the person says.
In May, Amazon sent out a report to politicians full of real-life anecdotes about the small businesses it helps and the start-ups it funds. When Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes wrote a column calling for his former company to be broken up, chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg went on TV to defend the social network.
In an interview on CNBC, Sandberg argued last month that breaking up tech companies would not address the underlying issues people have with technology, such as the spread of fake news or concerns about cybersecurity. She also warned that the US should not break up its home-grown tech leaders, because it could give China an advantage in the race for tech dominance.
IPhone maker Apple has already been fighting a major antitrust battle in the courts for years over whether the 30% fee it charges developers to sell software in its App Store is an abuse of its power. It lost a skirmish in that fight in front of the Supreme Court in May, opening the door to consumers who want to sue Apple for having to pay higher costs based on those fees. This week, two developers filed an antitrust suit against Apple, claiming its App Store fees are too high.
Apple CEO Tim Cook has taken pains to distance his company from Facebook and Google, painting them as data-collecting behemoths engaged in surveillance to feed their advertising empires, while his own company is concerned simply with selling phones and services. Apple’s marketing and product announcements have highlighted its privacy claims in recent months.
Stricter rules on privacy do not absolve Apple from potential antitrust concerns, but it could help the Cupertino, California-based company stay out of the larger political conversation about big tech, which often lumps together privacy, free speech, data collection and economic size, without much nuance.
That broader discussion is what concerns Atkinson, the think tank’s president, who also wrote a book called Big is Beautiful, defending US corporate giants. “We’re in a panic phase — an irrational panic,” Atkinson says.