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The Senate Bill That Has Big Tech Scared


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According to the tech giants and their lobbyists and front groups, the bill would be a disaster for the American consumer.

Credit: Getty Images

If you want to know how worried an industry is about a piece of pending legislation, a decent metric is how apocalyptic its predictions are about what the bill would do. By that standard, Big Tech is deeply troubled by the American Innovation and Choice Online Act.

The infelicitously named bill is designed to prevent dominant online platforms—like Apple and Facebook and, especially, Google and Amazon—from giving themselves an advantage over other businesses that must go through them to reach customers. As one of two antitrust bills voted out of committee by a strong bipartisan vote (the other would regulate app stores), it may be this Congress' best, even only, shot to stop the biggest tech companies from abusing their gatekeeper status.

"It is the ball game," says Luther Lowe, senior vice president of policy at Yelp and a longtime Google antagonist. "That's how these guys stay big and relevant. If they can't put their hand on the scale, then it makes them vulnerable to small and medium-size companies eating their market share."

From Wired
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