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Trump Administration

The Trump Administration Wages War on Meta

Mark Zuckerberg's donations haven't stopped the Federal Trade Commission from going after his company.

Jack Nicastro | 4.17.2025 4:03 PM

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Illustration of Donald Trump looking at the Meta, Instagram, and WhatsApp logos | lllustration: Eddie Marshall | Bumbleedee | Dreamstime.com Andrew Leyden | ZUMAPRESS | Newscom
(lllustration: Eddie Marshall | Bumbleedee | Dreamstime.com Andrew Leyden | ZUMAPRESS | Newscom)

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is resuming its antitrust attack on Meta. After first suing the tech giant in 2020, the Trump FTC now alleges that Meta violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by maintaining a personal social networking monopoly by purchasing Instagram and WhatsApp. But investing in software and attracting billions more users is a sign of competitiveness, not sclerosis.

Meta acquired Instagram in April 2012 for $1 billion in cash and Meta (then Facebook) shares and purchased WhatsApp for $19 billion in February 2014. The first Trump administration's lawsuit against Meta was dismissed in June 2021, after the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled the commission failed to show "that Facebook has monopoly power in the market for Personal Social Networking (PSN) Service." The FTC amended its complaint and the case was allowed to proceed to discovery.

The FTC accused Meta of acquiring Instagram "to neutralize a competitor," acquiring WhatsApp to "neutralize a competitive threat to its personal social networking monopoly," and leveraging network effects—an economic phenomenon where a product becomes more valuable as more people use it—to insulate itself from competition. While Instagram could rightly be seen as a genuine competitor of Facebook, its growth suggests that consumers derive more value from the platform now than they did before Meta's acquisition.

Instagram grew from 50 million monthly active users (MOAs) in 2012 to two billion MOAs as of February 2025. WhatsApp, an instant messaging app, not a social media platform (a fact the FTC acknowledges in its opening statement slides), also saw growth. In the month of its acquisition, WhatsApp had 465 million MOAs and grew to nearly 3 billion users by June 2024.

Brian Albrecht, chief economist at the International Center for Law and Economics, argues that network effects not only benefit consumers, but aren't necessarily anticompetitive. Albrecht points to TikTok as a firm that successfully entered the attention economy market and gained "hundreds of millions of users by offering a superior experience" despite preexisting social media networks. MySpace, meanwhile, exemplifies the bidirectional growth dynamics of networks: "When people start leaving the platform, each departure makes the network less valuable to those who remain, potentially triggering a mass exodus that feeds on itself."

The New York Times reports that the FTC's lead litigator in the case, Daniel Matheson, said "firms must compete if they want to succeed," but Meta "decided that competition was too hard and it would be easier to buy out their rivals."

The FTC also argues that Meta "overpaid" for Instagram and WhatsApp, according to the Times. Considering the extent to which the two apps' user bases grew and the billions of dollars that Meta has earned and projects to earn from them, it is unclear how the commission defines the concept.

If Meta had paid billions of dollars to acquire the intellectual property rights and shut down the services, a compelling antitrust case could be made on consumer welfare grounds. But Meta did just the opposite; the company invested in the platforms, improved them, and garnered billions more users as a result.

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NEXT: Obama Is a Huge Hypocrite for Praising Harvard's Anti-Trump Stance

Jack Nicastro is an assistant editor at Reason.

Trump AdministrationFederal Trade CommissionAntitrustTechnologySocial MediaMark Zuckerberg
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  1. Public Entelectual   2 months ago

    Unleash the Kraken lawyer before MTG gets ahold of the Mar A Lago Permissive Action Link .

    1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

      Turned out she was actually telling the truth.

    2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

      Fuck off and take you fake wed site with you, asshole.

  2. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>The FTC also argues that Meta "overpaid" for Instagram and WhatsApp ... it is unclear how the commission defines the concept.

    defined at the end of a gun.

  3. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    You didn't complain when Biden did it you hypocrite. That means whatever Trump does is ok.

    1. Don't get eliminated(Don't forget to eat your penguin meat)   2 months ago

      Poor sarcbot.

  4. NCMB   2 months ago

    How are consumers being harmed by platforms that are available at no cost to the consumer?

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 months ago

      I guess them censoring people on government orders doesn’t mean anything to you

      1. NCMB   2 months ago

        what does that have to do with the definition of a monopoly relative to antitrust litigation? further, if the government was coercing Meta to censor to users why would the government be taking legal action to stop what the government hoped to achieve?

  5. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

    "Mark Zuckerberg's donations haven't stopped the Federal Trade Commission from going after his company."

    Umm, how can you think that's a bad thing? I know you guys are all hardcore DC, but cripes.

    1. damikesc   2 months ago

      Yeah, even if you dislike the anti-trust action...having a President blatantly on the take is a bad thing.

      It was bad 1/21 - 1/25. I'm glad it has ended.

  6. VULGAR MADMAN   2 months ago

    Oh no, anyway,

  7. voluntaryist   2 months ago

    "...it is unclear how the commission defines the concept."
    ALL governments rule by deadly thread, fraud, NOT reason, rights.
    Therefore no definition is needed. Justice is hap-hazard. Don't like it? Stop making it possible by supporting it by work or deed, e.g., voting, paying tax, obeying regs.

  8. KHFleischer   2 months ago

    The government's definition of competition is altogether different from a normal person's. The latter sees competition as doing all one can to gain customers and profits, whereas the government sees competition as avoiding garnering what it regards as too much market dominance, ideally sharing it equally with all the others, but without any collusion. The diagnosis of collusion, however, is based on equal sharing of market by either pricing similarly or deciding to share the customer base equally. But wait! That's being "competitive" in anti-trust circles. You can't win, because you are guilty if you do, guilty if you don't.

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