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Facebook Files Motions to Dismiss Lawsuits Brought by FTC, State Attorneys General

Today we filed motions to dismiss the antitrust lawsuits brought by the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general. Antitrust laws are intended to promote competition and protect consumers. These complaints do not credibly claim that our conduct harmed either. Relying on a market definition that doesn’t make sense, these cases attempt a do-over — challenging acquisitions cleared by the FTC years ago, after enormous investment by Facebook to make them into the apps people enjoy today. The government ignores the realities of the fierce competition we face every day and sends a dangerous message that no sale is ever final. As we said when the FTC and the state attorneys general announced these lawsuits, people around the world use our products not because they have to, but because we make their lives better. Public policy challenges in areas like harmful content, election security and protecting people’s privacy should be addressed through updated regulations — not through misguided antitrust claims.

Below we provide a brief overview of the arguments in our motions.

Our Motion to Dismiss the FTC’s Lawsuit

No government lawsuit similar to this one has been brought in the 130-year history of the Sherman Act, and for good reason: The FTC has not alleged facts amounting to a plausible antitrust case. The FTC’s case against Facebook ignores the reality of the dynamic, intensely competitive high-tech industry in which Facebook operates. 

Our Motion to Dismiss the State AGs’ Lawsuit

The complaint filed by the state attorneys general fails on multiple grounds. It does not and cannot assert that their citizens paid higher prices, that output was reduced, or that any objective measure of quality declined as a result of Facebook’s challenged actions. Instead, the states, even more explicitly than the FTC, ground their lawsuit in public policy concerns — digital privacy, for example — that are not antitrust law concerns. And, like the FTC, the states focus their attacks on what Facebook did long ago. Their afterthought claims are brought by the wrong parties, are untimely, and are empty as a matter of antitrust law.

Our acquisitions have been good for competition, good for advertisers and good for people. Our products remain popular because we constantly evolve, innovate and invest in better experiences for people against world-class competitors. We believe the government should be denied the do-over it seeks. 

Learn more about how we’re building to compete.