ICYMI:
Chuck Grassley: Boosting Small Businesses on Big Tech
By Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa
Today there are only a handful of dominant
companies that control what Americans can buy, hear and say online. Big Tech
has power over the economy that we haven’t seen in generations, perhaps ever,
and it grows even larger, taking over yet more of our daily lives. With this
power, Big Tech is able to pick winners and losers on their platforms.
They behave as gatekeepers for other
businesses to reach consumers. They determine what news story, product or
website gets to be at the top of search results. Many times that ends up being
their own offering, putting small business owners who utilize these platforms
at a serious disadvantage when it comes to reaching consumers. In other words,
these giant companies are abusing their power to distort the online ecosystem
for their own benefit.
Because of that power and control that Big
Tech wields, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and I, along with several of our
Senate colleagues, have introduced the American
Innovation and Choice Online Act. Our legislation sets new restrictions on
how these huge platforms can unfairly promote themselves and disadvantage
rivals. It includes new interoperability requirements, limits the ability to
demand preferred placement payments, prevents biased search results and
establishes measures to ensure these platforms can’t just misuse a business’s
data to compete against them.
Importantly, the legislation will
establish significant penalties for violations. These tools will deter bad
behavior and provide an avenue for redress that hasn’t existed before. This
will ensure that dominant platforms will have to answer for unfair and unlawful
monopolistic conduct.
In essence, the bill will ensure that Big
Tech can be held accountable when they engage in a discriminatory and
anticompetitive manner by setting clear rules for businesses on dominant
platforms. This will help to promote competition by targeting harmful conduct
while ensuring that innovative and pro-consumer conduct is protected.
Big Tech wants you to believe that this
bill would hurt the success of small businesses who utilize their platforms.
But the truth is, Big Tech is worried about their bottom line, not the success
of small businesses. Our bill creates a more level landscape where small
businesses and the platforms they use can operate and compete fairly – an
environment where businesses both large and small can succeed.
Colleagues in the House of Representatives
from both sides of the aisle have approved similar legislation. This isn’t a
partisan issue. It’s not a regional issue. Because of the growing digital
marketplace, it’s a problem that spans the American economy.
Ensuring that there are competitive and
dynamic online markets is crucial to bringing more choices and lower prices to
American consumers. I use the Big Tech platforms and believe they offer a great
service to their consumers. This is not about arbitrarily breaking up companies
or trying to tear down what they have built. I am a strong believer in the free
market. America is still the greatest country in the world for starting and
growing a business.
That’s because we have had vigorous
competition in an open and free market. However, it has become clear that a few
Big Tech platforms have developed a stranglehold over the ability for small
businesses to reach their customers. It’s clear that these companies are using
their tremendous power to unfairly compete and control the online marketplace.
Our laws have not changed to keep up with
the growing and evolving online ecosystem. The American Innovation and Choice Online Act will make sure all
businesses can compete on an even and fair playing field online. This
legislation and effective antitrust enforcement is the first step in clawing
back the power over what we can buy, see and say online from these tech giants
and return primacy to individual Americans in the marketplace.
Chuck Grassley, a Republican, is the
senior senator from Iowa and co-author of the American Innovation and Choice Online Act.