Above all, the hearing represents the investigators’ best chance to present their case to the American public. With four CEOs who preside over sprawling corporate empires, however, there’s no way to cover everything. Here’s what the hearing is most likely to focus on.

Facebook

Facebook isn’t just the world’s biggest social media network; it also owns two of the other biggest, Instagram and WhatsApp, each of which has more than a billion users. And those are just two of more than 80 companies Facebook has acquired. One less well known name you can expect to hear is Onavo, a mobile analytics startup that Facebook bought in 2013 and whose data on other apps it allegedly used to identify candidates to acquire or copy. One up-and-comer that Onavo reportedly flagged: WhatsApp. (Facebook has defended its use of Onavo, and later similar projects, as “market research.”)

“All of the platforms, every one of them, has acquired small firms by the dozens or even hundreds,” said Herbert Hovenkamp, a leading antitrust expert who has been publicly skeptical of some of the other arguments made against Big Tech. Even Hovenkamp agrees, however, that these so-called “killer acquisitions,” which absorb potential rivals before they grow into the next big thing, are a major barrier to entrepreneurship and innovation. “Everybody knows what’s going on, which is that they’re trying to prevent the emergence of new platforms like themselves.” A concrete question for Congress is whether the laws around these purchases, especially under-the-radar acquisitions of nascent competitors, need to be tightened.

Look to see, also, whether the subcommittee is able to spell out how those acquisitions contribute to Facebook’s more high-profile problems. Facebook might feel more pressure to revise some of its policies on fact checking and hate speech, for example, if it thought users had anywhere else to take their business. Likewise, the legal scholar Dina Srinivasan has argued that while Facebook originally marketed itself as the most privacy-friendly social network, it has been able to gradually renege on its privacy commitments as it eliminates or swallows rivals. Expect Mark Zuckerberg to face tough questions about whether his long-term shopping spree has been aimed at snuffing out the competition—and whether that has been a good thing for Facebook’s users.

Google

Because Google has such a dominant position in so many different areas of the internet economy, the case against it might be both the strongest and the hardest to explain. Google is a dominant player not just in search, but also in digital advertising, cell phone operating systems, navigation, email, video sharing—it’s almost easier to name parts of the internet’s infrastructure in which Google doesn’t play an outsized role. And, like Facebook, the company has built that dominance through a dizzying array of acquisitions, including the likes of YouTube, Android, and DoubleClick. Expect the subcommittee to have plenty to say about those mergers.

The questioning is also likely to focus on the thing that turned “Google” into a verb. In its early days, using Google usually meant searching for something and then clicking a link to another website. But increasingly, businesses and rivals complain that Google has designed its search engine in ways that benefit Google at their expense. Today, ads dominate the top of search results like never before, which puts pressure on companies to pay to be seen. Organic results meanwhile appear to favor Google’s own properties: Google reviews instead of Yelp, YouTube instead of Vimeo, and so on. And the answer box, which pulls information from other websites, keeps users on Google, rather than clicking away, which in turn means more opportunities for them to click on ads.

You May Also Like

He Charted Marvel’s Massive Story—and Revealed an Epic

A longtime comics reader gets good at dealing with different versions of…

Mind-blowing discovery leaves archaeologists baffled as human remains found in Wales

THE 2,000-year-old remains of a Roman mercenary have been found close to…

Call of Duty: Vanguard players brand game ‘trash’ and ‘broken’ as bugs plague new release

ONE of Britain’s top YouTubers has blasted Call of Duty: Vanguard on…

PS5 stock UK update – GAME ‘SOLD OUT’ in 2 hours & latest on Currys, Very, Argos and Amazon Playstation consoles

PANDEMIC HINDERED THE SUPPLY CHAIN FOR PS5, SAYS BOSS Jim Ryan told…