A total of 45 states - plus Guam and the District of Columbia - are now partnering in the bipartisan investigation, New York Attorney General Letitia James, who's leading the probe, said.
Business
Standard : Facebook’s antitrust woes widened on Tuesday as
dozens more states joined New York’s wide-ranging investigation
into whether the company’s business practices have stifled
competition or put users at risk.
A
total of 45 states — plus Guam and the District of Columbia — are
now partnering in the bipartisan investigation, New
York Attorney General Letitia James, who’s leading the probe,
said in a statement.
James,
a Democrat, has said the probe aims to find out whether Facebook’s
actions endangered user data, reduced the quality of consumers’
choices or increased the price of advertising, its main source of
revenue.
“Big
Tech must account for its actions,” Louisiana Attorney General Jeff
Landry, whose state joined the probe, said in the statement. “I am
proud to join my Republican and Democrat colleagues in efforts to
ensure Tech Giants can no longer hide behind complexity and
complicity.”
Facebook
didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment. The company’s
shares dropped 2.1 per cent as of 11:28 am in New York trading.
The
expansion of the probe is the latest sign that states are continuing
to take aim at Big Tech, with a similar investigation led by Texas
under way against Alphabet’s Google. The state probes target a wide
range of practices that generate billions of dollars in revenue for
the world’s biggest social-media company and the largest seller of
search-based advertising.
On
Monday, James hosted a meeting of policy experts to discuss the
strengths and weaknesses of various antitrust legal theories
involving Facebook, according to a person familiar with the
gathering.
They
also reviewed Facebook’s acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp, as
well as privacy issues and the company’s power in the
digital-advertising market, the person said. The Wall Street Journal
first reported the meeting.
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