Microsoft is now the ‘adult in the room’ among big tech: Seattle Congresswoman

Ben Werschkul, Yahoo Finance  October 9, 2020


The so-called FAAMG stocks have been the target of Washington, D.C. all year.

Well, most of them at least.

The CEOs of Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) were 
virtually questioned before Congress this summer and are now the focus of a 
451-page report released this week on their business practices.
https://judiciary.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=3429

Facebook, Google and Twitter (TWTR) will be back before lawmakers later this 
month for a Senate hearing.

But Microsoft (MSFT) – no stranger to Congressional inquiries in years past – 
has largely managed to escape the glare.

That’s because they are now “the adult in the room in some ways on this issue,” 
said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D., Wash.), a Democratic member of the House 
Antitrust subcommittee, which has been diving into Big Tech’s practices for the 
last 16 months.

The final report doesn’t call for a break-up of the companies, but does talk 
about the need for “structural separations” to prohibit one part of a company 
from using another part of their platform to gain an unfair advantage.

The idea is a “roadmap” for restoring competition, improving innovation, and 
safeguarding democracy, say the report’s Democratic authors, Reps. Jerrold 
Nadler and David N. Cicilline.

‘I've had an open door policy’

Jayapal’s Seattle district includes Amazon’s headquarters and the company’s 
practices, specifically how it uses data from third-party sellers, has been one 
of her major focuses.

It’s Congress’s job to make sure “a company like Amazon can't just put a small 
business that produces diapers out of business by taking all of that market 
information that nobody else has access to, and using it to subsidize losses 
and push small companies out,” Jayapal told Yahoo Finance.

She has also had a less-than-cordial relationship with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. 
During a Yahoo Finance interview this summer, Jayapal said she had never before 
met the billionaire. They did talk virtually in July when she grilled him 
during the hearings, but she said this week that communication since then has 
been sparse.

“I've had an open door policy to speaking with Mr. Bezos and have invited him 
many times,” she said. Though she has met with Amazon senior managers.

Microsoft as the counterexample

“The lesson here is self-regulation doesn't work,” said Jayapal. She points to 
Microsoft as an example that Amazon should follow, of successfully working with 
the government.

In 1998, Microsoft was the subject of Congressional antitrust inquiries and 
many wanted to break the company up. In the end, Bill Gates was able to avoid a 
breakup by promising to change his company’s ways.

The company had to “change its culture, change its lines of business,” Jayapal 
said. The process of government involvement led to Microsoft creating a 
“platform for other small companies to thrive,” she said.
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