Meta’s Hopes of a Tech Antitrust Reprieve Are Dashed

Meta Platforms Inc. heads to court on Monday to defend claims it is an illegal monopoly and should be broken up. The Federal Trade Commission, even without former President Joe Biden’s antitrust hawk, Lina Khan, at the helm, seems to be going full steam ahead — despite Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg’s attempts to wine and dine the president into a change of heart.

The start of the trial, which will scrutinize Meta’s acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp, comes a week after yet another congressional hearing into Meta’s broader conduct. Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former Meta executive, spoke of what she said were efforts to collaborate with China on AI and censorship (the company strongly disputes the characterization).

At the same time, Meta’s stock price has cratered, and the president’s tariff fiasco threatens the company’s advertising business and its multibillion-dollar plans to expand its data center footprint and build AI.

It’s probably not what Zuckerberg had in mind when he heralded Trump’s return in a call with investors in January. “We now have a US administration that is proud of our leading companies, prioritizes American technology winning and that will defend our values and interests abroad,” he said. “I am optimistic about the progress and innovation that this can unlock, so this is going to be a big year.”

Under Biden, the onslaught against Big Tech had intensified. Antitrust enforcement efforts, some launched during the first Trump presidency, were starting to bite. Most notably, Google was found guilty of spending billions of dollars to establish an illegal monopoly over online search. Now it’s Meta’s turn. Should it lose its case, it risks being forcibly broken up, with Instagram and WhatsApp becoming independent companies.