Hidden Content
The FTC is preparing for a possible antitrust lawsuit against Facebook before the year ends, according to The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg. If you’ll recall, the agency started looking into the social network’s purchase of smaller companies like Instagram and WhatsApp last year, shortly after it Hidden Content ed Facebook with a $5 billion fine over its privacy practices related to the Cambridge Analytica scandal. While the FTC approved those acquisitions, it has the authority to revisit past transactions — in this case, its efforts were part of its investigation on the anticompetitive practices of the tech industry as a whole.

Back in July, lawmakers grilled Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg on the company’s $1 billion Instagram acquisition during an antitrust hearing also attended by Google’s and Amazon’s CEOs. Several emails from the social network’s top execs were brought up, including one where they talked about having to “neutralize a potential competitor.” Zuckerberg also reportedly wrote in an email that Facebook “can likely always just buy any competitive startups,” though he said he didn’t remember writing the note.

A report by The New York Times in July said it’s “virtually impossible” for the FTC to finish its investigation before 2021, but things may have changed since then. That said, the agency has yet to come to a final decision: WSJ says the commissioners still need to vote in favor of filing a lawsuit. If the FTC does decide to push through with filing one, it could take years to resolve, and the results of the upcoming elections could affect its outcome. In the event that Facebook loses the antitrust case, it could face restrictions or be forced to break off parts of its business, depending on what the agency can prove in court.