Alec 🌐 Profile picture
6 Oct, 22 tweets, 11 min read
🚨 House Judiciary Committee report on tech and antitrust is out!

Thread with some of my initial reactions as I go through it...
First highly misleading claim:

"a decade into the future, 30% of world GDP may lie with [Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google] and just a handful of others."

Source is a McKinsey report, which says 30% is literally all B2B and B2C commerce globally.

Not "a handful of others"!!
It's so ironic to me that of the 100 acquisitions Facebook has made, the Instagram acquisition is the one most commonly criticized while also being the only one that was extensively investigated & cleared by regulators in the US & abroad at the time.

Lots of hindsight bias here!
The report cites 1 poll showing that Americans are concerned with how much data Big Tech has & that they want more government regulation.

But this is at odds with the bulk of polls showing Americans approve of & trust tech companies more than other institutions (like Congress!).
A wild claim with no citation:

"Although Amazon is frequently described as controlling about 40% of U.S. online retail sales, this market share is likely understated, and estimates of about 50% or higher are more credible."

i.e., everyone says 40%, but we don't like that 🤷‍♂️
This paragraph highlights an unavoidable tension. The report admits that Apple's closed ecosystem has produced significant benefits to app developers and consumers.

But the flip side of that closed ecosystem is that some players feel excluded (or can't do what they want).
To learn more about this dynamic, read this excellent piece from @elidourado on tech platforms and vertical integration: medium.com/cgo-benchmark/…
The big recommendations for digital markets include structural separations (breakups!).

I wrote about why separating platform owners from platform competitors makes no sense: agglomerations.tech/a-glass-steaga…

And "safe harbor for news publishers" means an antitrust exemption. Not good!
It's not all bad!

Here are some genuinely good ideas:

Increase budgets for FTC and antitrust division of DOJ, which have steadily fallen over the last decade.

Use the FTC to collect more data & conduct merger retrospectives so we know what's going on and can update policies.
The report draws the wrong lesson from the Air Transport Association lobbying the Civil Aeronautics Board to not approve new airlines in the 1950s

It shows how regulators can become captured by industry!

The solution, in that case, was airline deregulation, not more regulation.
The report points out that Google has been trying to use Google Calendar to boost its free videoconferencing service (Google Meet).

It looks like this move has caused Zoom to *checks notes* reach all time highs in the stock market and shatter user growth records 🤔
Privacy is the ultimate "damned if you do, damned if you don't" issue in tech.

In two *consecutive* paragraphs, the report claims that there is a race to the bottom on privacy that excludes privacy-centric business models AND Apple's focus on privacy has anticompetitive effects.
The report includes 15 pages on the decline of the news industry in the age of the internet (much discussion of Google and Facebook, none of Craigslist).

Might the fact that publishers compete with digital platforms for ad $ affect news coverage of tech?

techdirt.com/articles/20191…
"market participants told the Subcommittee that Google’s preferential treatment of its own verticals, as well as its direct listing of information in the 'OneBox' that appears at the top of Google search results, has the net effect of diverting traffic from competing verticals"
"In 2019, JP Morgan estimated that, though priced at $119, a Prime subscription is valued at about $860, up 10% from its estimated value in 2018."

lmao this line is supposed to show why Amazon is behaving anti-competitively but instead it just sounds like an ad for Prime.
"Amazon depresses wages when it enters a local labor market."

No, no, no. This is just Simpson's paradox.

I wrote a whole thread explaining this a while back:
"Several market participants expressed concerns to Subcommittee staff that Amazon uses its high and steady profits from AWS to subsidize these other lines of business, including its retail operation."

This myth just won't die.

Look at the financial statements, they're public!
Lol this chart on page 92 is already wildly out of date.

TikTok is now at 1 billion monthly active users.

It achieved that milestone faster than any other social media app ever.
This is potentially the most mind-blowing thing so far:

The report spends 82 pages on Amazon and the competitive landscape in ecommerce.

No mention of Shopify, a $126 billion ecommerce company that powers more than one million online businesses.

In Q2 2020, GMV grew 119% YoY!!
I know it's a long document and all, but the sloppiness is really quite astounding.

Errors like Apple claiming has "100 million iPhone users worldwide" should be caught by anyone who has a passing familiarity with the tech industry.

Dozens of examples like this in the report.
"It was collusion, but within an internal monopoly."

This is very much not a thing!

"Internal collusion" is also known as "operating a business."

I internally collude with my coworkers all the time. Hard to get projects done otherwise!
antitrust in theory vs. antitrust in reality...

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More from @AlecStapp

29 Jul
The CEOs of Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook will be testifying in front of Congress today.

Critics want to break up the companies.

Here are the 10 myths about Big Tech and antitrust you should be aware of before tuning in.
Myth #1: “Big Tech companies are monopolies”

People use this term loosely (which I get!) to mean that a company is big or dominant, but when it comes to an actual monopolization case, the legal meaning of the word really matters.
According to DOJ guidelines, it’s “a market share in excess of two-thirds.”

The tech companies likely don’t exceed that threshold in any antitrust product market.

- Amazon 38% of ecommerce
- Apple 58% of US smartphone OS
- Google 29% of digital ads
- Facebook 23% of digital ads
Read 17 tweets
14 May
1/ What's the difference between neoliberalism and social democracy?

Re-sharing this great thread from @CascadianSolo, which had been lost to the sands of Twitter...
2/ "I. Am. Not. A. Social. Democrat.

I'm a neoliberal.

Left-neoliberalism on this site is often conflated with social democracy. It really, really shouldn't be.

Key differences between left-neoliberals and social democrats, a thread:"
3/ "Because some of you don't seem to know the difference.

Minimum wage:

Social Democrats generally want high minimum wages, particularly nationally. Left-neoliberals are more cautious, preferring minimum wages set based on cost of living."
Read 11 tweets
24 Apr
1/ Hal's analysis hinges on this claim that Amazon controls "nearly 70% of gross merchandise transacted across all US online platforms."

In fact, Amazon's share of US e-commerce (including both 1st party and 3rd party sales) is 38%.

Here's why the numbers are so different...
2/ Hal cites a report from Digital Commerce.

I followed the link, but there is no direct statistic for Amazon's share of the US ecommerce market.

Instead there is an infographic showing the five largest US e-commerce platforms.
3/ Here are the number from that infographic:

Amazon: $339b
eBay: $90b
Walmart: $49b
Wish: $10b
Houzz: $9b

339 / (339+90+49+10+9) = 68.21%

There's Hal's "nearly 70%" figure.

This is wrong wrong wrong for two reasons.
Read 6 tweets
9 Apr
1/ @calebwatney and I wrote 4,000 words for @mercatus detailing how we can use government purchase guarantees and targeted deregulation to massively increase production of essential medical supplies.

Short thread with the highlights...

mercatus.org/publications/c…
2/ Everyone is talking about using Title I of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to effectively nationalize the supply chain of critical medical supplies.

But there’s a much faster and more effective path forward to eliminate shortages...

3/ To maximize production of critical medical supplies, policymakers should:

- make purchase guarantees
- issue guaranteed loans
- grant liability waivers
- offer FDA exemptions
- delegate product testing
- remove EUA quantity limits
- expand imports
- waive price gouging laws
Read 14 tweets
20 Mar
1/ I wrote 3,000 words for The Dispatch on what exactly went wrong with coronavirus testing in the US

thedispatch.com/p/timeline-the…
2/ The first coronavirus case in the US and South Korea was detected on January 21.

South Korea quickly ramped up widespread testing.

Why did the US fail to do the same?

In short: the FDA dropped the ball.
3/ There have been 3 major regulatory barriers to scaling up testing

- obtaining an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA)
- being certified for high-complexity testing under CLIA
- complying with HIPAA Privacy Rule and the Common Rule related to protection of human research subjects
Read 14 tweets
9 Nov 19
So much of life is pure luck, being in the right place at the right time.

This is not that.
Here are some other examples of tech visionaries:

Aug 2006: Elon Musk publishes "The Secret Tesla Motors Master Plan"

tesla.com/blog/secret-te…
May 1995: Bill Gates writes an internal memo titled "The Internet Tidal Wave"

lettersofnote.com/2011/07/intern…
Read 9 tweets

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