Antitrust probe: US FTC could sue Facebook by Nov end

By IANS | Updated: November 7, 2020 15:55 IST2020-11-07T15:44:04+5:302020-11-07T15:55:10+5:30

San Francisco, Nov 7 The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) could file a lawsuit against Facebook alleging antitrust ...

Antitrust probe: US FTC could sue Facebook by Nov end | Antitrust probe: US FTC could sue Facebook by Nov end

Antitrust probe: US FTC could sue Facebook by Nov end

San Francisco, Nov 7 The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) could file a lawsuit against Facebook alleging antitrust violations before the end of this month, news website Politico reported.

The suit is likely to allege that Facebook harmed competition by acquiring smaller rivals and maintained a stranglehold on user data, said the report on Friday, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter.

"It could ultimately force Facebook to unwind its acquisitions of photo-sharing app Instagram and messaging platform WhatsApp," said the report, adding that FTC Chair Joe Simons is in favour of handling the case internally, bringing it before the agency's administrative law judge.

While an in-house suit increases the chance of winning the case for FTC, it would bar the states from joining the litigation.

This could be disappointing for those states that are also investigating the social networking giant and are preparing to file their own suit in the US federal court.

In August, Politico reported that the FTC interviewed Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg as part of its anti-competition probe into the company.

In July this year, Zuckerberg also testified before a US Congress panel in relation to the House Judiciary Committee's antitrust investigation into four big tech companies, including Facebook.

The Facebook CEO faced tough questions from the panel on acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp.

The FTC last year imposed a record $5 billion fine on Facebook over its ties with the now defunct political analytics firm Cambridge Analytica and other privacy violations.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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