Crackdown on Big Tech Very Likely, Says Author Brian McCullough
*By Christian Smith*
A regulatory crackdown on behemoths like Alphabet and Facebook is more likely than ever, according to Brian McCullough, author of "How the Internet Happened: From Netscape to the iPhone."
"That's where the money is, and that's where the power is," McCullough said Thursday in an interview on Cheddar. "It's inevitable that governments are going to start looking at too much power concentrated in one sector."
In recent months, Facebook ($FB) and its peers have come under fire from regulators in Europe over issues of data privacy. On Thursday, the United Kingdom's data watchdog fined Facebook £500,000 (just over $640,000) over a breach of user data in the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
So far, European agencies have been the only groups to enact significant regulations on internet companies ー the primary example being the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which requires companies to disclose exactly what data they are collecting and gives users more control over their own information.
While Facebook has taken the most aggressive punches from critics over issues of data privacy, McCullough thinks Google's parent company Alphabet ($GOOGL) is the most likely to be implicated by anti-trust laws ー if the U.S. were to impose restrictions, that is.
"Even though Facebook gets all of the headlines, nobody hoovers up your data more than Google does," McCullough said.
Some candidates in this year's midterm primaries like Zephyr Teachout ー who ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for New York State Attorney General ー have floated the idea of investigating companies like Alphabet and Facebook for antitrust infractions, but no such initiative has taken shape.
"How the Internet Happened: From Netscape to the iPhone" is available in stores and online.
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/the-day-of-reckoning-is-coming-for-big-internet-companies).
An independent watchdog within the IRS reports that while taxpayer services have vastly improved, the agency is still too slow to resolve identity theft cases. And National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins says those delays are “unconscionable.” Erin M. Collins said in the report released Wednesday that overall the 2024 filing season went smoothly, though IRS delays in resolving identity theft victim assistance cases are worsening. It took nearly 19 months to resolve self-reported identity theft cases as of January, and Wednesday's report states that now it takes 22 months to resolve these cases.
Amazon.com Inc. surpassed $2 trillion in market value for the first time in afternoon trading on Wednesday. The push higher for Amazon’s stock market valuation comes a little more than a week after Nvidia hit $3 trillion and briefly became the most valuable company on Wall Street. Nvidia’s chips are used to power many AI application and its valuation has soared as a result. Amazon has also been making big investments in AI as global interest has grown in the technology. Most of the company’s focus has been on business-focused products.