Is Big Tech about to begin reaping the whirlwind of their post-election censorship-spree and market strangulation?
As Redstate’s Sarah Lee reported on Monday afternoon, Big Tech players like Google are facing some antitrust suits both in United States and the U.K.
Big Tech is facing a barrage of antitrust lawsuits, both state and federal, as well as potential antitrust probes in the U.K. They can now add the first antitrust lawsuit from a news publishing company out of West Virginia alleging Google and Facebook “[have] so monopolized the online ad market that ‘it threatens the extinction of local newspapers across the country.’”
HD Media, which owns several newspapers in the state, also references a suit by 10 Republican Attorneys General filed in December as proof that the two tech giants “conspired to further their dominance with a secret agreement.”
In the U.K., a competition watchdog opened a formal probe in January to determine if Google was squeezing out competition by ostensibly protecting user privacy by disabling cookies in their Chrome browser, making it harder for newspapers and competitors to track data online while Google offers other ways for advertisers to target users with personalized ads.
These issues are important monopoly issues, but are not directly related to the discrimination aimed at conservative outlets and content creators since the beginning of January. They are certainly indirectly related, however. The issue is monopoly and overreach. Google, Facebook and Twitter as well as Amazon have made moves to directly squash competitors (driving Parler off the internet and deplatforming outlets or creators who depend on social media for distribution). The longer it goes on the more people are getting caught in the trap. Have they finally reached too far?
We should expect to see a myriad of lawsuits from individual internet creators and at the forefront is conservative comedian and BlazeTV host Steven Crowder. Crowder’s lawyer announced Monday that they intended to sue Facebook over unfair competition and antitrust, among other things. Naturally the news broke at The Blaze.
Bill Richmond, the lawyer for BlazeTV host Steven Crowder, announced Monday he has begun filing a lawsuit against Facebook Inc. over “unfair competition, fraud, false advertising, and antitrust” violations.
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