US & Canada
Big Tech on edge as Meta faces antitrust lawsuit
Double exposure photograph of a portrait of Mark Zuckerberg and the Meta Group logo at Kerlouan in Brittany in France on April 11 2025.
Hans Lucas via Reuters
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg took the stand Monday in what many are calling the “antitrust trial of the decade.” The FTC wants Meta to spin off Instagram and WhatsApp, arguing the company bought out the rival platforms before they could compete with it.
What’s the evidence? The government is pointing to a2012 Zuckerberg email in which he called Instagram’s advantage over Facebook’s own photo sharing functions “scary”, adding “it might be worth paying a lot of money for this” because “it is better to buy than to compete.”
But counsel for Metasay the decision was necessary to compete with other platforms like TikTok and Youtube.
The case will hinge on how the court defines Meta’s “market” – if TikTok and Youtube do in fact count as “competitors”, then Meta would not be considered not a monopoly in the space.
This is all a big test of Big Tech’s relationship with the White House. The Meta case was launched during US President Donald Trump’s first term, but in his second term Big Tech has featured more prominently in Trump’s entourage. Zuckerberg himself has visited the White House several times to try (so far unsuccessfully) to convince Trump to settle the case rather than proceed to trial. He also, like many tech billionaires, contributed lavishly to Trump's inauguration fund.As artificial intelligence rapidly reshapes the global economy, one question is becoming increasingly urgent: who will actually benefit? Recorded at the 2026 AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, this special Global Stage conversation brings together leaders from the United Nations, Microsoft, and the scientific community to examine how AI can help tackle some of the world's biggest challenges, from disaster preparedness and climate resilience to humanitarian response and sustainable development.
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