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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:32 PM

    This shouldn't be complicated: if Sweeney is indeed free to vigorously enforce the law against Meta, then she could have published a statement the day her appointment was made public: "I do not have *any* contractual restrictions on my ability to discuss Meta or its current or former personnel." If she is truly able to do this job, then it shouldn't take her half a year to issue a weasel-worded, heavily caveated statement.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:32 PM

    Having narrowly escaped the existential crisis of democratic and legal accountability, Big Tech has captured a string of states: Ireland and the UK, and (especially) the USA. The fears of the Marshall Plan technocrats have been realized: Big Tech is Trump and Trump is Big Tech, and together, they are executing an authoritarian takeover of the USA and countries around the world.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:33 PM

    Now that the US state has merged with US tech, every country around the world has motive, means and opportunity to build a "post-American internet" of open source apps running at local data centers:

    pluralistic.net/2026/01/01/39c

    But don't write US enforcers out of the picture just yet! Writing for *The Sling*, Tyler Clark calls for "regionalized enforcement" by US states against Big Tech companies:

    thesling.org/regionalizing-enf

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:33 PM

    You see, it's not just international governments whose lawbooks were rewritten through the Marshall Plan that have access to America's antitrust laws. When Congress wrote the Clayton Act, Sherman Act and other US federal antitrust laws, they explicitly wrote in the power of state Attorneys General to enforce them. That means that 50+ state AGs all have the ability to wield antitrust against US tech giants.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:33 PM

    Congress foresaw this moment, when federal enforcers partnered with US monopolists, trading open bribes for approval for corrupt mergers and other illegal conduct:

    pluralistic.net/2026/02/13/kha

    But where the Feds fail, the states can pick up the slack. When states fine US companies and order their breakup, it's a lot harder for those companies to flout those orders - unlike the EU or Canada or the UK, America's state governments are first class actors in the US judicial system.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:34 PM

    I like Clark's idea, but I think he's missing a trick: US regional antitrust enforcement doesn't need to lean on the US government for resources and collaboration. There are national governments all over the world whose antitrust laws were created by the Marshall Plan, and those are the same laws that state AGs have at their disposal. And of course, tech companies' crimes aren't just the same in France and Japan - they're also the same in New York State and California.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:34 PM

    The US government isn't the only game in town. American state enforcers have a global buffet of enforcement partners, and those international enforcers need American collaborators who can collect the fines they levy and enforce the breakup orders they issue. It's a win-win (for the people, for international enforcers, and the states) and a big loss (for Trump's tech companies and his corrupt antitrust dingo babysitters).

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:34 PM

    One place this could start: joint hearings that call ex-Big Tech employees as key witnesses, daring companies like Meta to invoke their gag orders. It's one thing to tell Sarah Wynn-Williams she can't talk to a crowd at a book festival, but Meta has taken the position that she cannot speak before a legislature or regulator, either.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:34 PM

    Wynn-Williams isn't alone. The Big Tech companies are laying off employees by the thousands, thanks to their failed 11-figure AI bets. Those ex-employees know where every body is buried. They know where to find the memos that establish their ex-bosses' *intent* to create and maintain monopolies and the hardest part of any antitrust case is establishing intent.

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  • Jul 7, 2026, 12:34 PM

    Together, US states and foreign enforcers have the opportunity of the century - a chance to shatter the power of Trump's tech giants, who are so key to Trump's authoritarian takeover.

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