Technology
- Home
- Technology
- News
FTC says it will appeal Meta antitrust loss
The Federal Trade Commission will appeal its loss in a landmark antitrust case against Meta, the agency announced Tuesday. US District Court Judge James Boasberg ruled in November that the government failed to prove that Meta had an illegal monopoly over a su…

Published 15 days ago on Jan 23rd 2026, 5:00 am
By Web Desk

The Federal Trade Commission will appeal its loss in a landmark antitrust case against Meta, the agency announced Tuesday.
US District Court Judge James Boasberg ruled in November that the government failed to prove that Meta had an illegal monopoly over a subset of social networking services meant for connecting with friends and family online. Boasberg wrote that the government had an “uphill battle” in how it defined the market Meta allegedly dominated, a challenge exacerbated by the rise of TikTok and changes in the market over the five years between the FTC filing the case and it going to trial.
The FTC is asking the US Court of Appeals in DC to review Boasberg’s decision and says the evidence from the six-week trial proves its case. The government argued that Meta maintained its monopoly over the personal social networking market — which it said included services like Snapchat and MeWe, but not TikTok or YouTube — by acquiring nascent threats Instagram and WhatsApp. The FTC argued that Meta’s dominance let it degrade the quality of its service without any real alternatives for consumers to flee to.
“The U.S. economy thrives when competition can flourish and U.S. businesses compete fairly against one another,” FTC Bureau of Competition Director Daniel Guarnera said in a statement. “Yet Meta has maintained its dominant position and record profits for well over a decade not through legitimate competition, but by buying its most significant competitive threats. The Trump-Vance FTC will continue fighting its historic case against Meta to ensure that competition can thrive across the country to the benefit of all Americans and U.S. businesses.”
“The District Court’s decision to reject the FTC’s arguments is correct, and recognizes the fierce competition we face,” Meta spokesperson Chris Sgro said in a statement. “We will remain focused on innovating and investing in America.”
Update, January 20th: Added Meta statement.

Borderlands 4 for Switch 2 is on ‘pause’
- a day ago

YouTube now blocking background playback on mobile browsers
- a day ago

Aluminium: Why Google’s Android for PC launch may be messy and controversial
- a day ago

Department of Justice appeals Google search monopoly ruling
- a day ago

ICE invades Minnesota and Minnesotans fight back
- a day ago

31 martyred, 169 injured in Islamabad suicide blast
- 9 hours ago

The quiet reason why Trump is losing Gen Z
- a day ago

Pakistan committed to boost ties with Uzbekistan in diverse fields: President
- 9 hours ago

Security forces kill 24 Indian backed terrorists in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa operations
- 16 hours ago

I don’t hate the robot barista like I thought I would
- a day ago

You need to listen to M83’s icy post-rock record Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts
- a day ago

PM Shehbaz invites Uzbek firms to invest in Pakistan
- 9 hours ago
You May Like
Trending






