News
15don MSN
The case is expected to run through late next week and include testimony from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and former COO Sheryl ...
Facebook's board was not trying to protect founder Mark Zuckerberg in 2019 when it agreed to pay a $5 billion regulatory fine ...
Shareholders claim that Mark Zuckerberg and other top officials should have to reimburse Facebook for $8 billion in fines and ...
17d
Cryptopolitan on MSNMeta shareholders test boundaries as they drag Zuckerberg and top board members to courtMeta’s executives will meet in a Delaware court starting Wednesday over a lawsuit filed by three minority shareholders who allege that the company’s board of ...
Hosted on MSN2mon
Antitrust Showdown: Meta Says FTC Has No CaseOverall, Meta isn’t holding back, calling the FTC’s evidence largely speculative. Their motion specifically stated that the FTC has no evidence that Meta holds a 60% market share in any market ...
Meta has called the FTC’s case “weak” and, in a show of confidence, wrapped up its defense earlier than expected last week after calling just a few witnesses.
AP Last week, Meta asked the judge to throw out the case midway through trial, asserting that the FTC had failed to prove its argument. Boasberg shot down the request.
The FTC just rested its case following weeks of testimony in a landmark antitrust case against Meta. But before Meta can begin its defense, the company's lawyers have opted for another move ...
The FTC argues Meta, then known as Facebook Inc., bought the two companies in 2012 and 2014 rather than compete with them. The agency argued Meta made the acquisitions to reinforce its monopoly in ...
Beyond that, Meta argues that, far from harming competition, their acquisitions actually made things better. They claim the FTC hasn’t proven that Meta reduced the quality or output of its services.
During Meta’s opening defense arguments against the FTC, it showed the court data from when TikTok was briefly offline before President Trump intervened to bring it back. While TikTok was down ...
The FTC is trying to pin Zuckerberg down on its market definition. But he’s not giving them much to work with. The government wants to show that Meta dominates a distinct market of social apps ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results