The US Federal Trade Commission said it will challenge a judgeβs decision from November that sided with Meta Platforms Inc. over its purchases of Instagram and WhatsApp.
Judge James Boasberg said the deals for the photo-sharing app and messaging service didnβt break antitrust laws. He found the social networking company didnβt illegally control the market because it competes with Alphabet Inc.βs YouTube and TikTok.
FTC spokesperson Joe Simonson stood by the agencyβs case. βMeta violated our antitrust laws when it acquired Instagram and WhatsApp,β he said. He pointed to 2020, when the agency first filed the case during the first Trump administration, saying βthe staggering market power was on full display for everyone to see.β
Meta spokesperson Christopher Sgro said the district court got it right and βrecognizes the fierce competition we face.β He said the company would βremain focused on innovating and investing in America.β
The ruling was a big loss for the FTC, which filed the lawsuit in 2020 trying to break up the company. The agency filed a notice of appeal Tuesday and will file its full arguments later.
A senior agency official, who didnβt want to be named, told Bloomberg that the FTC thinks Boasberg looked at competition today instead of the market back when the lawsuit started. The official said that even now, Metaβs Instagram doesnβt really compete with YouTube or TikTok.
FTC failed to prove monopoly power before
In his November decision, Boasberg wrote that the FTC had a hard time defining Metaβs product market because βapps surge and recede, chase one craze and move on from others, and add new features with each passing year.β He said the agency didnβt prove Meta holds monopoly power now.
Meta Chief Legal Officer Jen Newstead was happy with the decision, saying it βrecognizes that Meta faces fierce competition.β She called the companyβs products beneficial and said they show American innovation and economic growth.
The FTCβs original case said Meta, which used to be called Facebook Inc., bought the two companies in 2012 and 2014 so it wouldnβt have to compete with them. The agency said these purchases strengthened Metaβs monopoly in social networking for friends and family connections.
Meta argued its competitors go way beyond traditional friends and family sharing. The company includes short-form video, commerce and private messaging. Meta brought in people from Reddit Inc., X, TikTok and Pinterest Inc. to talk about how their platforms compete for user time and attention, which means advertising money.
Boasberg said TikTok, YouTube identical to Meta apps
Boasberg didnβt buy the FTCβs claim that Metaβs Facebook and Instagram are mainly for personal social networking while TikTok and YouTube are video entertainment apps. He wrote that the four platforms have βevolved to have nearly identicalβ features, and evidence βresoundingly showsβ users see TikTok and YouTube as alternatives to Metaβs apps.
This case is one of five major antitrust lawsuits filed by the FTC or Justice Department against the worldβs biggest technology platforms. Two federal judges already ruled that Alphabet Inc.βs Google illegally monopolized online search and advertising markets, while cases against Amazon.com Inc. and Apple Inc. are still pending.
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