Google, Facebook Agreed to Team Up Against Possible Antitrust Action, Says Draft Lawsuit: Report

The unredacted draft lawsuit said Facebook's CEO Sheryl Sandberg signed the deal with Google, according to the report.

Google, Facebook Agreed to Team Up Against Possible Antitrust Action, Says Draft Lawsuit: Report

Draft version also cites an email in which Sandberg told Zuckerberg that this is a big deal strategically

Highlights
  • Companies were aware the agreement could trigger antitrust investigations
  • States had accused Google of working with Facebook in an unlawful manner
  • Google spokesperson told such agreement over antitrust threats are common
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Facebook and Google agreed to "cooperate and assist one another" in case of an investigation into their pact to work together in online advertising, the Wall Street Journal reported late on Monday. The Journal report cited an unredacted version of a lawsuit filed by 10 states against Google last week. The states had accused Google of working with Facebook in an unlawful manner that violated antitrust law to boost its already-dominant online advertising business.

According to the report, the lawsuit said that Google and Facebook were aware that their agreement could trigger antitrust investigations and discussed how to deal with them. A Google spokesperson told the Journal that such agreements over antitrust threats are extremely common.

The unredacted draft version of the lawsuit, which the Journal said it reviewed, also said that Facebook's Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg signed the deal with Google. The draft version also cites an email in which Sandberg told Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg and other executives that "this is a big deal strategically," the report said.

Facebook did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Silicon Valley has been working behind the scenes to secure senior roles for tech allies in lesser-known but still vital parts of president-elect Joe Biden's administration, as reported by Reuters. Executives and employees at tech companies such as Alphabet-owned Google, Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft were pushing to place candidates in senior roles at government agencies, according to four sources with knowledge of the matter.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


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