Politics & Government
Arizona Joins Suit Accusing Facebook Of Creating Monopoly
The suit, filed by the Federal Trade Commission, alleges that Facebook has spent years buying the competition rather than competing with it.

ARIZONA — The Federal Trade Commission, with bipartisan support from attorneys general in YOUR STATE and dozens of others, filed a lawsuit in federal court Wednesday against social media giant Facebook.
In the suit, the FTC accuses the company of illegally dominating the social media industry and eliminating business threats through years of monopolization and anti-competitive conduct.
According to the complaint, Facebook has used a “systematic strategy” over the years to eliminate threats to its business. This includes the company’s acquisition of Instagram in 2012 and mobile messaging app WhatsApp in 2014, both of which were perceived as an “existential threat to Facebook’s monopoly power.”
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The lawsuit also alleges Facebook has limited third-party software developers’ access to interconnections to its platform, allowing access only after developers “refrain from developing competing functionalities, and from connecting with or promoting other social networking services.”
As a result of its actions, the lawsuit alleges, Facebook has seen “staggering” profits. Last year, Facebook generated revenues of more than $70 billion and profits of more than $18.5 billion.
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The complaint states that Facebook’s actions have not only harmed competition but also left consumers with few choices for personal social networking and deprived advertisers of the benefits of competition.
With the suit, the FTC is seeking an injunction in federal court that could require Facebook to divest its assets, including Instagram and WhatsApp, and require Facebook to seek prior approval for future mergers and acquisitions.
“Personal social networking is central to the lives of millions of Americans,” Ian Conner, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Competition, said in a release. “Our aim is to roll back Facebook’s anti-competitive conduct and restore competition so that innovation and free competition can thrive.”
The lawsuit was filed following an investigation by the FTC’s Technology Enforcement Division.
Attorneys general from 46 states, the District of Columbia and Guam comprise the bipartisan coalition that signed on in support of the lawsuit. Only South Dakota, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina declined to join the suit.
“Facebook’s dominant market power has been illegally achieved at the cost of consumer choice, market innovation, and consumer privacy,” Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said in a statement Wednesday. “Our bipartisan coalition of Attorneys General is committed to standing up for all of the consumers and hardworking small businesses that have been harmed along the way.”
This isn't the first time Brnovich has taken on the tech giant.
In March 2018, he sent a letter to Facebook regarding his obligation as Attorney General to help “ensure that the privacy of the people of Arizona is respected and preserved.” He also raised concerns about Facebook allowing third-party application developers to not only access personal data from the platform's users but also acquire comprehensive data about friends of those Facebook users.
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