"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2024-03-31T00:30:19Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2024/03/30/cocoa-chocolate-pricing-surge-easter-rodriguez-nr-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="cocoa chocolate pricing surge easter rodriguez nr vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="cocoa chocolate pricing surge easter rodriguez nr vpx"
data-video-tags="agricultural commodities,agriculture,agriculture, forestry, and commercial fishing,banking, finance and investments,business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,commodity markets,consumer products,domestic alerts,domestic-business,easter,financial markets and investing,food and drink,food products,holidays and observances,iab-agriculture,iab-business,iab-business and finance,iab-business banking & finance,iab-commodities,iab-desserts and baking,iab-economy,iab-financial industry,iab-food & drink,iab-industries,international alerts,international-business,kinds of foods and beverages,price increases,sweets and desserts"
data-details="">
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2024-03-22T12:43:25Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2024/03/22/trump-truth-social-prepares-to-go-public-egan-cnntm-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="trump truth social prepares to go public egan cnntm vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="trump truth social prepares to go public egan cnntm vpx"
data-video-tags="companies,domestic alerts,domestic-business,domestic-us politics,donald trump,iab-computing,iab-internet,iab-politics,iab-social networking,iab-technology & computing,international alerts,international-business,international-us politics,political figures - us,social media,society,trump media & technology group"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Donald Trump may be on the verge of a massive financial win
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2024-03-21T05:30:53Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2024/03/21/china-nongfu-spring-boycott-stewart-lkl-hnk-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="china nongfu spring boycott stewart lkl hnk vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="china nongfu spring boycott stewart lkl hnk vpx"
data-video-tags="beverages,bottled water,boycotts,business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,consumer products,food and drink,iab-food & drink,iab-non-alcoholic beverages,kinds of foods and beverages"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
See why some Chinese people are boycotting a popular brand
Each year, powerful tech executives, startup founders and investors flock to the invite-only Code Conference, one of the most closely watched tech conferences in the world, to discuss what’s next for their companies and the broader industry.
In previous years, it’s where you would hear Sundar Pichai tout Google’s advances in artificial intelligence and listen to Jeff Bezos explain how winning a Golden Globe can help Amazon sell more shoes. It’s where Mary Meeker, a prominent venture capitalist, unveils her sweeping internet trends report, year after year, hundreds of slides long.
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki
Noam Galai/Getty Images
But at this year’s conference, held this week in Scottsdale, Arizona, a procession of top tech execs were pressed to answer the same difficult question again and again: What will happen if mounting antitrust scrutiny of the tech industry forces their companies to be broken up?
One exec, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki, seemed wholly unprepared to answer the question on stage Monday. She said “I don’t know” twice in her response before ending with: “We would figure it out.”
The antitrust developments have rattled Wall Street, shaving off tens of billions of dollars in market value from the four companies in a single day. Investors have for years bet on the remarkable growth of these four companies, two of which briefly topped $1 trillion in market cap over the last year. It also served as a stark reminder that an industry once hailed as representing the best of American innovation is now being scrutinized by politicians on both sides of the aisle for having too much power.
At the conference, several execs settled on a talking point that could well be repeated many times in the coming months as antitrust hearings and investigations get under way: Sure, you could break us up, but that won’t help consumers or society.
“I just think it’s a terrible idea,” Adam Mosseri, the head of Facebook subsidiary Instagram, said on stage on Monday. “Right now, there are more people who work on integrity and safety issues at Facebook than anyone who works at Instagram. … If you split us up, you would cut that off, and it would make those problems that much more difficult.”
Andy Jassy, the CEO of Amazon’s $25 billioncloud computing division, suggested breaking up Amazon would only make it harder for the company to “stay focused” on serving its customers. What customers want, he added, is more capabilities, not the company being distracted by having to build new financial systems, an HR systemand manage analyst calls.
Jassy reluctantly admitted thatAmazon might not have a choice in the matter in the end. “If we’re forced to do it, I guess we’d have to do it,” he said.
While the tech executives predictably balked at having their businesses broken into pieces, many did agree that regulation is needed to tackle a host of issues, including data privacy, content moderation and facial recognition services,such as Amazon’s Rekognition tool.
“If you want more protection, which I think is totally reasonable, the federal government should regulate it,” Jassy said, referring to facial recognition technology. “I wish they’d hurry up – if they don’t, you’re going to have 50 different laws in 50 different states.”
Wojcicki was equally matter-of-fact: “There’s definitely more regulation in store for us.”