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Pretty obvious all of the tech oligarchies are colluding. They should be broken up, Apple, Google, Facebook, Oracle, Etc. All the major companies in all the major sectors of the economy collude with one another. I remember when the secret Apple/Google/Oracle collusion came out. On Hacker News people from the fast food industry stated that they engaged in the same practices between McDonalds/Burger King/Wendy's etc. So even the lowest rung of labor in the U.S. has the same collusion and illegal practices.
What we all think is happening and what you can prove in court are often two different things. That's where the real skill comes from legislators: writing laws that can effectively be enforced.
Actually, It depends on more than that: the skill of Federal Detectives to find and get key people to co-operate, the skill of Federal Prosecutors to argue these cases convincingly in front of a judge/jury etc.

Lawmakers are required to pass reasonable laws and regulations, but these are often provide guidelines. Antitrust laws were written in response to specific issues with monopolization, and many Big Tech companies have managed to skirt around them by interpreting its provisions in specific ways.

duopolies are the new monopolies. we've known this for some time now.
Nope, cartels will always exist, unless you are willing to break them up. The number of members in the club (ie trade association) which does the fixing is irrelevant and varies wildly. Most of the time more than two
2+ competitors colluding are called a cartel and the reason we have anti-trust laws.
"They are private companies, they can do what they want!"
The article is long on feelings and seems very short on actual law breaking. I hope the lawsuit(s) cover more than this or they'll likely collapse.

The accusations seem to come down to: Google sell ads (legal); Google is building a new system for the market to do that in (legal); Google wanted to get Facebook to join (legal); Google offered them preferential treatment to get them (legal); Facebook accepted (legal).

Plenty of this might seem unfair. Or underhand. But those aren't just legal, they're totally standard in all company to company market places. When Dell buy components, they get a better price from Intel than your local shop. They even get first dibs on new components, even if they're paying less for them.

There is only really one claim in here that might rise to the level of illegal, but Google actively denied it was true:

>Perhaps the most serious claim in the draft complaint was that the two companies had predetermined that Facebook would win a fixed percentage of auctions that it bid on.

>“Unbeknown to other market participants, no matter how high others might bid, the parties have agreed that the gavel will come down in Facebook’s favor a set number of times,” the draft complaint said. A Google spokeswoman said Facebook must make the highest bid to win an auction, just like its other exchange and ad network partners.

I'm concerned that we have problems with Big Tech. But people keep grabbing the first idea that comes along: antitrust. Only antitrust won't do what they think it does. I'm not even sure people know what they want at this point...

It's not legal when those companies are a duopoly and the agreement is (at least partially) about dropping competing products.
Its not illegal to have or consolidate market power AFAIK. It only becomes illegal if you can prove that that hurt consumers.

I'm not clear what part of this causes that. The whole point of this change is to up the price paid to publishers got AND offer more options to ad buyers. That seems like an improvement for everyone.

Google, Facebook, eBay and other big tech companies are very good at walking this line: we control the market but we don't abuse that control.

So either someone has to show abuse or we need to change the law...

>Its not illegal to have or consolidate market power AFAIK

Well using your previous example of Intel giving Dell volume discounts versus a small vendor, yes that in itself is legal. But don't forget AMD successfully sued Intel under antitrust laws for giving discounts to major vendors like Dell in exchange for preferential use of Intel chips over other competing chip makers.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Micro_Devices,_Inc._v....

This deal between Google and Facebook is strikingly similar. Google is giving preferential treatment to Facebook that it doesn't currently offer to other ad buyers and access to analytical data it also doesn't provide to other ad buyers in exchange for Facebook committing to spend a certain amount of money on Google ads. But more damning, according the article, "the two companies had predetermined that Facebook would win a fixed percentage of auctions that it bid on." This clearly gives Facebook an unfair competitive edge over other advertisers and amounts to quid pro quo, which is illegal, just like the Intel antitrust suit.

> Only antitrust won't do what they think it does. I'm not even sure people know what they want at this point..

Though I loathe concern trolling, on this aspect, I am very guilty.

None of the proposed measures I've read even acknowledge my concerns, much less offer remedies.

I'll share mine if you'll share yours.

I want to foster fairness and competition. The most modest, minimal measures are:

- prohibit self dealing, conflicts of interest

- impose rule of law over de facto marketplaces

- ban competing with one's own clients and partners

That's the very least we can do to oxygenate our economies. I also support far more assertive measures,

- repeated radical cashectomies

- fixed royalty schedule for all patents (taxes by another name)

- restore Eisenhower era corporate tax rates, with generous breaks for R&D and employee profit sharing

-limit comparable compensation (of all kinda) between CEO and janitors to 40:1.

- reassert shareholder rights by banning minority control (eg voting super shares for founders)

That's just my casual list, from the hip. I should probably draft a more comprehensive compilation of all the remedies I've heard proposed.

I can agree with a lot of this and I have to give it to you: you know what you want.

My concern (sorry to troll!?) is that I feel like some people don't like Google (or FB or amazon or other big tech) because of privacy concerns, some because of social impact (fake news, conspiracies, like antivaxx etc) concerns, some because of worries about media consolidation and power, some because its just cool to be contrarian.

Very few of those people will actually be happier with what is left if we "hit Google with hammers till it falls apart", which seems to be all anyone can think to do.

Coming back to your points, can I ask: what if (hypothetically) we implimented your points and prices went up and jobs were lost? Is that a price worth paying or is this all a means to an end (cheaper stuff and more jobs)?

I don't have a problem with either answer, but the Means To An End approach is how we got here so...

> what if ... prices went up

Apologies. I omitted one of the most potent reforms floated by Sen Mark Warner (IIRC) and others: sharply curtailing freemium and ad supported biz models. Facepalm slap. Were I to compile reform proposals, I'd avoid such silly errors.

> jobs were lost

Which jobs are we talking about? Do you anticipant greater job loses than precipitated by Amazon thus far, or by WalMart before them? In your taxonomy, are gig workers included? In which case they are employees, not contractors. So should we start treating them as employees?

--

I'm often reminded by Winston Churchill's wisdom advocating the rebuilding of their damaged Parliament exactly as before:

We shape the buildings that then shape us.

Markets, economies, society, beliefs are human things, made by humans, to benefit humans.

We can build the society we want, if only we found the courage.

(comment deleted)
Unfortunately, too hard to prove in court.