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?️ Congress goes all-in on tech antitrust

?️ Congress goes all-in on tech antitrust

FromLawtrades Podcast


?️ Congress goes all-in on tech antitrust

FromLawtrades Podcast

ratings:
Length:
9 minutes
Released:
Jun 16, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This week: Major tech companies are on red alert thanks to Congress and the music industry is taking a Napster-like approach to a children’s app. Plus, Ohio wants Google to be a utility.? Congress launches the biggest antitrust action in years Congress is officially not playing around when it comes to threatening Silicon Valley. Legislators filed five bills last week aimed squarely at the biggest tech companies.If they pass, here’s what could happen: Apple would lose some of its power for controlling pricing and payments on the App Store (somewhere, Epic is exhaling).Amazon would lose its ability to prioritize its own productsAcquisitions by any of the biggest tech companies would face greater scrutiny, particularly those involving smaller startups that threaten the companies’ power.Amazon and Google may have to divest in some of their products, like YouTube.Facebook would have to loosen its practices over collecting and storing data. Faster than lawsuitsThese are bills in Congress. They could potentially create reform far faster than anything from the Department of Justice. The VerdictSome of the bills have bipartisan support. It’s not a stretch that Congress forces major tech companies to change in the near future. ☎️ Ohio wants to take Google back to the landline era Decades ago, American states used to have faceless phone companies and electric companies, and the limited choices were tightly controlled by the government. Ohio wants to bring back that era -- but for Google. Ohio AG Dave Yost filed a lawsuit against Google last week: He seeks to make Google what is known as a “common carrier” and cited a law that is over 100 years old (literally from the robber barons era). As a common carrier, Google would not be able to prioritize its own products in search, i.e. YouTube and Maps. Yost even brought up railroad references: In announcing the lawsuit, he said, “When you own the railroad or the electric company or the cellphone tower, you have to treat everyone the same and give everybody access.” Google is not having it A spokesperson told NBC search results would be worse for consumers if Ohio succeeded in its lawsuit.The VerdictOne antitrust expert told the NYT Ohio would have a difficult time proving Google should be a common carrier. But as we know from the flurry of antitrust actions, the government may get more control over companies like Google one way or another.? The music industry believes the app Roblox is teaching young children how to pirate music Move over Napster, Sean Parker, and Limewire, the music industry has a new target for lawsuits, and it’s called Roblox. Roblox is an online gaming platform popular with children: It lets users create their own shareable games. Revenues soared in 2020, topping $500 million. Music is part of the game system, too: People can upload songs from popular artists like Ariana Grande and Imagine Dragons in the video games they create. The National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA) has sued, alleging Roblox is hosting a library filled with unlicensed content. But the music industry’s beef goes beyond licensingYes, the NMPA wrote that Roblox “actively preys on its impressionable user base and their desire for popular music, teaching children that pirating music is perfectly acceptable.” The VerdictMaybe this just means Roblox has hit the big time. The music industry has gone after YouTube and Twitch over copyright issues in recent years, too.   
Released:
Jun 16, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Welcome to Not Billable. Weekly legal news updates. Full event replays. And, a chance to hear from industry leaders about what’s been going on behind the scenes. Powered by Lawtrades, and hosted by their Head of Community, Matt Margolis.