Skip to main content

Zuckerberg wrote Facebook can ‘just buy any competitive startups’

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that the social media giant can “always just buy any competitive startups,” according to emails obtained by Congress.

U.S. Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) questioned Zuckerberg about his acquisitions of other companies such as WhatsApp and Instagram during Wednesday’s Big Tech hearing.

Recommended Videos

As evidence, Neguse read internal Facebook emails from 2012, right after the company bought Instagram.

“We can likely always just buy any competitive startups but it will be a while before we can buy Google,” Neguse read from the email, which was written by Zuckerberg himself.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
House of Representatives

Zuckerberg said he did not remember writing the email but said that “it sounds like a joke.”

Documents from the Hearing on “Online Platforms and Market Power: Examining the Dominance of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google" pic.twitter.com/1o6TwV8k4k

— House Judiciary Dems (@HouseJudiciary) July 29, 2020

Neguse said that Facebook could have been considered a monopoly by as early as 2012 by “purchasing, replicating, and eliminating competition.” Zuckerberg disagreed with this view but did acknowledge Facebook has acquired other successful companies. Zuckerberg admitted that WhatsApp and Instagram — which were later snapped up by Facebook — had been competitors against the social media giant.

“The space of people connecting with other people is a very large space and I would agree there were different approaches that we took to addressing parts of that space,” Zuckerberg said.

Zuckerberg said that WhatsApp was a competitor when Facebook bought it in 2014, but that it was also complementary to the social network’s platform.

Facebook and Zuckerberg spent much of Wednesday’s hearing facing questions over its strategy of copying or buying up social media competitors. However, he did push back, saying that the apps were not guaranteed to succeed before they were bought by Facebook.

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Tech CEO Congressional Hearing: Recap of the biggest moments you missed
big tech logos around capitol hill

For much of Wednesday, the CEOs of America's biggest tech companies -- Jeff Bezos (Amazon), Tim Cook (Apple), Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook), and Sundar Pichai (Google) -- testified before a House Judiciary Committee about whether their market dominance violates antitrust laws.

The topic is a crucial one, as the tech industry employs millions of Americans and generates trillions of dollars -- and increasingly, only a handful of companies are responsible for that success. Amazon may control just 5.5% of all retail sales, for example, but the company will capture 38% of US ecommerce sales in 2020, according to industry tracker eMarketer. Likewise, Facebook and Google dominate the online advertising industry, with some reports claiming the pair together control as much as 80% of the market -- which is why some have called for an end to big tech.

Read more
Big Tech CEOs’ showdown with Congress: The antitrust hearing that wasn’t
Styled Graphic featuring Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai

All eyes were on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to see if Congress could muster up the focus to figure out whether four of the biggest tech companies of our time were really monopolies. What happened instead was rhetorical chaos and grandstanding.

Whatever hope there might have been that this hearing before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust would be focused and pointed in its questions was quickly dashed: It became clear within minutes that the members of Congress would take their time to ask more or less whatever they wanted of the four tech titans assembled before them.

Read more
Leading Dem says Apple, Google, Facebook, and Amazon have ‘monopoly power’
rep cicilline ask zuckerberb about policing misinformation on covid 19 poster for 6176418334001

Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook have "monopoly power" -- and must be either regulated or broken up, according to a leading House Democrat.

In Wednesday's Big Tech antitrust hearing, the focus throughout its five-hour run time was largely on anything else other than the topic at hand.

Read more