Proton

The desire for an internet that protects people’s privacy is growing. A 2019 Pew Research poll(nueva ventana) showed that 79% of Americans report being concerned about how companies use their data. But any privacy reforms that don’t address Big Tech’s dominance of the internet are bound to fail.

Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, Apple, and Amazon can get away with privacy abuses because they dominate the internet. They buy out startups(nueva ventana) before they can challenge their position, spend millions lobbying lawmakers(nueva ventana), and use their control of key internet infrastructure to hobble competitors(nueva ventana)

People are left with few alternatives, which leads to a sense of resignation. That same Pew poll said 62% of Americans believe it is impossible to go through daily life without having data collected about them by companies.

To build an internet that protects privacy, we must build an internet that’s competitive.

That’s why we are joining Fight for the Future, DuckDuckGo, Neeva, and other privacy-focused organizations and internet companies to call on US policymakers to pass two crucial pieces of legislation that aim to make the internet a level playing field.

This is our chance to stop Big Tech’s worst abuses and force them to compete on the merits of their product, not the size of their monopoly. Let lawmakers know you want them to make the internet a level playing field where our basic rights are protected. 

You can also write a note to your representative(nueva ventana). (The option to call your representative takes you to a webpage that performs minimal data collection.)

You can read the open letter we sent to lawmakers below.


We, the undersigned companies, urge Congress to consider and pass the antitrust bills voted out of the Judiciary Committees in each Chamber thanks to the leadership of Senators Grassley and Klobuchar and Representatives Buck and Cicilline to restore competition in the digital economy. Governments, regulators, and courts around the world have found that a few large technology companies abuse their dominant positions in the market to stifle competition, minimize choice, and subsequently entrench their own power. The antitrust bills moving through Congress would bar many of the anticompetitive tactics employed by these companies, helping to restore competition in the market and ensure that consumers have true choice over the digital services they use every day.

Due to their market dominance, a handful of technology companies are abusing their positions to discriminate against rivals and give their own products and services preferential placement, access, and data on online platforms and operating systems. For example, because of their gatekeeper status, dominant technology companies can and do use manipulative designs to steer individuals away from rival services; restrict the ability of competitors to interoperate; and make it difficult for users to uninstall their apps or change defaults settings and services. Additionally, these dominant technology companies collect and monetize troves of non-public information from consumers and competitors, which they can exploit for their own purposes, severely hampering new innovations from emerging in our tech sector. The collection and exploitation of this private information strengthens the position of these digital gatekeepers, allowing them to more precisely target consumers and improve their own products and services. In aggregate, these tactics not only harm competitors and the market, but also deprive consumers of the innovative offerings a vibrant market would bring. 

Passage of antitrust reform legislation is vitally necessary to address the many ways that dominant tech companies are harming competition and consumers. We urge Congress to consider and pass these antitrust bills as soon as possible and send these critical measures to the President’s desk. The time is now for Congress to act to restore competition to the digital market. 

Sincerely, 

Automattic

Basecamp

Brave Software

Coalition for App Fairness

Disconnect, Inc. 

Dots

DuckDuckGo

Efani Secure Mobile

Fathom Analytics

fuboTV

Function X

Initialized Capital 

Kelkoo Group

Libro.fm

LI Toy & Game

Malloc Inc. 

Match Group

Mio

Neeva

Patreon

Presearch

Proton AG

Sonos

SparkToro

Spotify

StartMail

Thexyz

Tinder

Travel Technology Association

Tutanota

Yelp

You.com

Artículos relacionados

The cover image for a Proton Pass blog about brushing scams, which shows a package with a warning sign above it
en
A brushing scam means your personal data has leaked online. Learn how to protect yourself with hide-my-email aliases and dark web monitoring.
An encryption lock breaking
en
Apple turned off its end-to-end encryption in the UK in response to a government notice. We look at what this means and how people in the UK can protect their data.
Image showing Google, Apple, and Meta as apps that allow surveillance
en
Big Tech companies - Apple, Google, and Meta - have built a mass surveillance machine that the government can easily tap into.
Proton symbol for protecting user privacy after Apple disabled ADP in the UK
en
Apple dropped ADP for UK users, leaving data unprotected by end-to-end encryption. See why E2EE matters and how to keep your data safe.
The cover image for a Proton Pass blog about how to find your saved passwords on Android, which shows a phone screen, an Android icon, and three password fields
en
If you're using an Android device, here's how you can find the saved passwords on your phone and how Proton Pass can help you organize them more securely.
Email verification: How to check whether an email address is legit
en
Find out how to verify an email address to ensure it’s legitimate, protect your communications, and avoid scams or phishing attempts.