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Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Big Tech CEOs to defend their companies before US Congress by listing competitors
By Reuters
The chief executives of four of the world’s largest tech companies,
Amazon.com Inc, Facebook Inc, Apple and Alphabet’s Google, plan to argue
in a congressional hearing on antitrust on Wednesday that they face
intense competition from each other and from other rivals.
The testimony from Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg,
Google’s Sundar Pichai and Apple’s Tim Cook, which was released Tuesday,
portrays four chief executives who are looking over their shoulders at
competitors who could render them obsolete.
Pichai argued that search - which Google dominates by most metrics - was
broader than just typing a query into Google, and said he remained
concerned about being relevant as people turn to Twitter, Pinterest or
other websites for information.
“We know Google’s continued success is not guaranteed. Google operates
in highly competitive and dynamic global markets, in which prices are
free or falling, and products are constantly improving,” Pichai said in
the prepared remarks.
The four will testify to a panel of lawmakers investigating how their
business practices and data gathering have hurt smaller rivals as they
seek to retain their dominance, or expand.
In his remarks, Bezos said Amazon occupies a small share of the overall
retail market and competes with retailers like Walmart, which is twice
its size. He also said the coronavirus pandemic boosted e-commerce
businesses across the spectrum and not just Amazon.
Bezos also lays out how small sellers have succeeded on Amazon’s
third-party marketplace, a practice that has come under scrutiny from
lawmakers.
In his prepared testimony, Zuckerberg argued that Facebook competes
against other companies appearing at the hearing and against others
globally.
Zuckerberg will also defend Facebook’s acquisitions by saying the social
media platform helped companies like WhatsApp and Instagram grow. Both
are owned by Facebook.
He will also remind lawmakers of the competitive threat U.S. tech
companies face from China, saying that China is building its “own
version of the internet focused on very different ideas, and they are
exporting their vision to other countries.”
Zuckerberg also renewed Facebook’s call for government regulation. He
has previously called for more laws in areas where the company has been
criticized - such as harmful content in social media, election integrity
and privacy.
Apple’s Tim Cook will tell the committee the company “does not have a
dominant market share in any market where we do business. That is not
just true for iPhone, it is true for any product category.”
He will argue the company’s “commissions are comparable to or lower than
commissions charged by the majority of our competitors. And they are
vastly lower than the 50 to 70 percent that software developers paid to
distribute their work before we launched the App Store.”
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