On Monday, a federal court dismissed antitrust claims the Federal Trade Commission and a slate of state attorneys general had brought against Facebook. But the company shouldn’t celebrate just yet (though shares already rose following news of the decision).
One thing this case highlights is that it is difficult to apply traditional antitrust law to digital platforms.
Big Tech is overdue for a reckoning, and the key now is to make sure the legislative and regulatory steps taken in the name of reining in the industry actually result in protecting consumers and communities, not simply political interests.
This will not be the end of attempts from states and federal agencies to put more restraints on the power of the tech industry: In the judgment Monday, the court gave leave to the FTC to amend and refile its petition against Facebook at a later date. Given the recent swearing in of antitrust expert and noted technology critic Lina Khan as FTC chairperson and growing threats of antitrust legislation from prominent representatives, it appears more than likely that Facebook will face antitrust-related actions again.
From 2018’s Cambridge Analytica scandal to the Facebook Oversight Board’s decision earlier this year to sustain a ban on any accounts belonging to former President Donald Trump, Facebook has frequently emerged as a chief subject of high-profile, headline-making events related to tech platforms and social media.
But we should not be looking to Facebook as a representative of all tech companies, nor should legal actions to address any anticompetitive behavior from Facebook be muddled with general anti-tech sentiment for political gain.
In the complaint from Monday’s decision, the FTC and the state attorneys general argued that Facebook had engaged in anticompetitive behavior, creating a monopoly in the market of “personal social networking services.”
The FTC argued that Facebook has created an unlawful monopoly by preventing other competitors from competing in the market. It’s true Facebook has had a habit of acquiring potential competitors, including Instagram and WhatsApp, and the company has implemented policies that prohibit other companies from creating apps that can interface with Facebook’s.
One thing this case highlights is that it is difficult to apply traditional antitrust law to digital platforms.
But the court ruled that the FTC failed to prove that Facebook actually has monopoly power in the market for “personal social networking services.”
One thing this case highlights is that it is difficult to apply traditional antitrust law to digital platforms. In fact, one of the first achievements to propel Khan to the national stage was the publication of her landmark paper “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox,” which argued for a new model for applying antitrust laws to digital platforms like Amazon and, indeed, Facebook.
The court in Monday’s FTC v. Facebook judgment ran into one of the issues Kahn raised in her 2017 paper: the difficulty of determining what a digital market is or measuring competition effects in such a market.









