- Antitrust agency is suing to break up social-networking giant
- Facebook parent says FTC has no evidence of consumer harm
The company formerly known as Facebook bought photo-sharing app Instagram in 2012 and the messaging app WhatsApp in 2014. Both transactions were scrutinized by the FTC at the time before they closed – Instagram as part of an in-depth review and WhatsApp with a simple 30-day one.
In the years since, the agency has faced significant criticism for allowing the deals to move forward. In 2020, the antitrust agency sued Meta alleging that it monopolized the personal social networking market by buying up emerging rivals. Meta is seeking to
In its filing Tuesday, however, the FTC said the case involves “information Meta had in its files and did not provide” during the original reviews.
“At Meta’s request the FTC undertook only a limited review” of the deals, the agency said. “The FTC now has available vastly more evidence, including pre-acquisition documents Meta did not provide in 2012 and 2014.”
Instagram’s popularity has been key to Meta’s continued success. Instagram
Tuesday’s court filing isn’t the first allegation that Meta failed to turn over information that might have impacted the initial merger reviews. In 2017, European antitrust regulators fined Meta 110 million euros ($122.1 million) for
Meta has also degraded its platform for users most reliant on their apps, significantly increasing the ad load on first Instagram and then its flagship product Facebook, the agency said in the filing. It also “chronically deprived Instagram of resources to innovate and improve features,” the FTC said.
US District Judge
Meta had no immediate comment.
The case is US Federal Trade Commission v. Facebook Inc., 20-3590, US District Court for the District of Columbia.
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Peter Blumberg
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