
Acquisition sprees by at least two of the four big tech companies under scrutiny — Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Facebook Inc. — has piqued the interest of lawmakers and privacy advocates.
The big picture: Probes into the power of Big Tech launched by federal and state authorities are turning a year old, and observers expect action in the form of formal lawsuits and potentially damning reports — even as the companies have become a lifeline for Americans during the pandemic lockdown.
What they're saying: William Kovacic, a George Washington University law professor and former Federal Trade Commission chairman:
"I think all of [the antitrust enforcers] have foreshadowed there would be some event by the end of the summer. I think they've poured a lot of cement around their feet so they don't have a lot of room to maneuver on this. They have to do something that indicates forward motion come early autumn."














Comment: With the November election right around the corner, and the reality of a faulty mail-in fiasco already in the making, big tech will most likely opt to delay any current legalities in favor of a jiggered change of leadership. There is no doubt these companies will 'support' a win for the Democratic Party and thereby self-alter the parameters of their individual legal predicaments.