27 July 2021
The tech industry's leading giants are floating on a cushion of record profits in lakes of reserve cash, and all that money makes them just about unsinkable.
Driving the news: Tech's big five — Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft — all report their earnings between Tuesday and Thursday this week. Recent quarters have delivered blowout results for these companies, and many observers expect the same again.
As David Streitfeld writes in the New York Times: "Silicon Valley, still the world headquarters for tech start-ups, has never seen so much loot."
- That's saying a lot, considering that the industry's last boom during the '90s dotcom era was dubbed "the largest legal creation of wealth in the history of the planet" by one of its leading investors, John Doerr.
Money creates possibilities. Here are some of the strategies you can adopt when your company is a geyser of profit:
1. Take enormous fines in stride as a cost of doing business.
- As of last year, the EU had fined Google roughly $10 billion for antitrust violations. France added nearly another $1 billion this year.
- In 2019, the FTC entered a $5 billion fine against Facebook for privacy violations, the largest in the agency's history.
- For other companies, such staggering penalties might have caused CEOs to resign or stocks to crash.
- But Google and Facebook are both riding an enormous wave of online-advertising profits. Facebook paid the FTC fine, while Google is still challenging the EU's penalties. Both companies, barely scuffed, have gotten on with their charmed lives.
2. Out-lawyer the government.
- The threats to these companies from antitrust action by the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission are real. The government has something they don't: legal authority and the power to compel action.
- But these firms also have something the government lacks: nearly unlimited legal budgets.
- Regulatory agencies are hamstrung by public-sector pay scales and staffing limits, and funding from Congress in recent decades has starved them of resources.
- Private corporations can buy as much legal firepower as they want, and for Big Tech that means almost any adverse outcome can easily be delayed and often be overturned.
3. Spend fortunes on "transparency."
- Big companies tend to spend freely on PR, but tech giants have taken the strategy to a new level, creating new departments (and even an entire independent organization) intended to demonstrate their willingness to share data and accept accountability.
- When Facebook established its independent Oversight Board, it plowed $130 million into a trust to fund it.
- Facebook and some of its peers have built teams to provide quarterly transparency reports in areas like political advertising, content moderation, security issues and human rights.
- Yes, but: The companies' reports tend to pick and choose statistics that demonstrate they're taking action against big problems like misinformation. They're unenthusiastic about giving outsiders access to tools that let anyone pry into their closely held data.
Between the lines: The sheer magnitude of tech's financial power also makes these companies a target for critics' outrage and government regulation — but little of that has made an impact to date.
The bottom line: Big Tech companies may not be totally invulnerable, but their cash hoards get them awfully close.
Transcripts show George Floyd told police "I can't breathe" over 20 times
Section2Newly released transcripts of bodycam footage from the Minneapolis Police Department show that George Floyd told officers he could not breathe more than 20 times in the moments leading up to his death.
Why it matters: Floyd's killing sparked a national wave of Black Lives Matter protests and an ongoing reckoning over systemic racism in the United States. The transcripts "offer one the most thorough and dramatic accounts" before Floyd's death, The New York Times writes.
The state of play: The transcripts were released as former officer Thomas Lane seeks to have the charges that he aided in Floyd's death thrown out in court, per the Times. He is one of four officers who have been charged.
- The filings also include a 60-page transcript of an interview with Lane. He said he "felt maybe that something was going on" when asked if he believed that Floyd was having a medical emergency at the time.
What the transcripts say:
- Floyd told the officers he was claustrophobic as they tried to get him into the squad car.
- The transcripts also show Floyd saying, "Momma, I love you. Tell my kids I love them. I'm dead."
- Former officer Derek Chauvin, who had his knee on Floyd's neck for over eight minutes, told Floyd, "Then stop talking, stop yelling, it takes a heck of a lot of oxygen to talk."
Read the transcripts via DocumentCloud.