Former Facebook executive says Google, Facebook are 'surveillance states' and risk more regulation
Former Facebook executive says Google, Facebook
are 'surveillance states' and risk more regulation
·
Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya says Facebook and Google
are like "surveillance states" and are inviting a government
crackdown.
·
The former Facebook executive is bullish on Amazon, and thinks it
will have a longer runway before the government tries to intervene.
Anita Balakrishnan Published
12 Hours Ago CNBC.com
Even though he was
once an executive at Facebook,
Chamath Palihapitiya, CEO of Social Capital Hedosophia Holdings, favors
investing in Amazon instead,
he told CNBC's "Fast Money: Halftime
Report" on Thursday.
President Donald Trump has been a critic of Amazon, tweeting his disdain for coverage
from The Washington Post, which is a personal holding of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. But Palihapitiya said he
thinks that Facebook and Google face more regulatory risk, given the many
retailers that compete with Amazon.
"Amazon is a
microscopic portion of global consumption today, so ultimately I think it has
more room to grow before it invites regulatory overview," Palihapitiya
said. "On the other hand, Facebook and Google effectively are surveillance
states. And they have so much personal, private information about so many
citizens of so many countries."
Google has already had a tussle with
regulators in Europe, after the company was slapped with a record
fine in one investigation.
"It's already
beginning," Palihapitiya said. "Because it's part and parcel to them
realizing that there's too much power unbounded."
Palihapitiya noted
that many big technology companies have seen their stocks soar, making it
tempting to take gains. Palihapitiya's holding company, which also includes
former Twitter executive Adam Bain, hit the public markets Thursday.
But Palihapitiya said
he thinks investors should reframe the way they think about the long-term
trajectories of the companies.
For instance, Amazon
is competing against Wal-Mart, which has acquired e-commerce companies like
Jet.com and Bonobos. But with tools like Alexa, robots and cloud, Amazon's
technology could lead it to victory over "laggard competitors,"
Palihapitiya said.
"It is competing
against fundamentally impaired companies, including Wal-Mart, quite
honestly," Palihapitiya said. "That don't have the technical savvy,
they don't have the capabilities, specialty retailers, an entire overhang of
cost structure that [Amazon doesn't] have to deal with."
Facebook, Google and
Wal-Mart did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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