HomeNewsBusiness'It's hard to prove': Why antitrust suits against Facebook face hurdles

'It's hard to prove': Why antitrust suits against Facebook face hurdles

Even if the FTC and states prove their cases against Facebook, there remains a question of whether the company can even disentangle WhatsApp and Instagram from its core social networking business.

December 11, 2020 / 20:20 IST
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When the Federal Trade Commission and more than 40 states sued Facebook on Wednesday for illegally killing competition and demanded that the company be split apart, lawmakers and public interest groups applauded.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said, “Facebook’s reign of unaccountable, abusive practices against consumers, competitors and innovation must end.” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., called the lawsuits “a necessity” and said Facebook’s acquisitions of nascent rivals “were meant to be anti-competitive, and they should be broken up.”

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But lawmakers and consumer advocates did not address a hard-to-deny factor: The cases against Facebook are far from a slam dunk.

Antitrust laws are complex and were put in place before the advent of modern technology. The FTC and state attorneys general now face an uphill battle to prove their allegations, some competition experts said.