U.S. NEWS 02.09.14 The Daily Beast
: How a Few Monster Tech Firms
are Taking Over Everything from Media to Space Travel and What it Means for the
Rest of Us
The monster tech firms are stifling competition and consolidating their
power while they expand into new markets. Like
the old industrial magnates, they want to control everything.
The iconic view of tech companies almost invariably stress their roots in peopleÕs garages, plucky individual entrepreneurs
ready to challenge all comers. Yet increasingly the leading tech firms –
Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and especially Google
– have morphed into vast tech conglomerates, with hands in ever more
numerous, and sometimes not obvious, fields of endeavor. Ironically, the very
entrepreneurial form that defeated JapanÕs bid for global technological
dominance is morphing into an American version of the famed keiretsu that have long dominated the Japanese
economy. The keiretsu, epitomized
by such sprawling groups as Mitsubishi, Sumitomo and even Toyota, spread across a
vast field of activities, leveraging their access to finance as a means to
expand into an ever-increasing number of fields. The can best be understood,
notes veteran Japan-based journalist Karel van Wolferen, as a series of Òintertwined hierarchies.Ó
Increasingly, American technology is dominated by a handful of companies
allied to a small but powerful group of investors and serial entrepreneurs.
These firms and individuals certainly compete but largely only with other
members of their elite club. And while top executives and investors move from
one firm to another, the big companies have constrained competition for those
below the executive tier with gentlemanÕs
agreements not to recruit each otherÕs top employees. At the top of
the American keiretsu system
stands a remarkably small group whose fortunes
depend in part on monetizing invasions of privacy to use the
Internet as a vehicle for advertising. These are not warm and cuddly
competitors. Both Google
and Microsoft have been accused
of using anti-competitive practices to keep out rivals, in part by refusing to
license technology acquiring of potential competitors. ÒTech is something like the new Wall Street," notes
economist Umair Haque,
ÒMostly white mostly dudes getting rich
by making stuff of limited social purpose and impact.Ó [
See Facebook ]
Like their soul brothers on Wall Street ,
AmericaÕs elite tech firms – and their owners – have become
fantastically cash rich. Besides GE, a classic conglomerate, the largest cash
hordes now belong to Apple, Microsoft, Cisco, Oracle and Google, all
of whom sometimes have more dollars on hand than the US government. Seven
of the eight biggest individual winners
from stock gains in 2013 were tech entrepreneurs, led by Jeff Bezos who added $12 billion to his paper wealth, Mark Zuckerberg who ranked in an additional $11.9 billion while
Google founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, had
their wallets expanded by roughly $9 billion.
This wealth reflects in large part the oligopolistic nature of many key
tech sectors, for example, the Apple-Google duopoly on mobile phone software,
MicrosoftÕs dominant position in operating systems for PCs, GoogleÕs utter
control of search, and FacebookÕs domination of
social media. In most cases, these fields are controlled at levels of eighty
percent or more. AmericaÕs new gilded age giants are similar
to JapanÕs keiretsu but they
also share a lineage with the early 20th Century trusts that controlled railroads,
cotton, silver and other commodities. Those early fortunes helped provide the
foundation for such banking firms as J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Oppenheimer,
and Lehman Brothers, as well as the basis for the Rockefeller and Hearst
empires. Their wealth, in the era before income taxes, was immense; by the
1880s the revenues of
Cornelius VanderbiltÕs railroad empire were greater than those of
the federal government.
The control of immense resources by a small group of tech firms, like the
oligopolies of the earlier industrial magnates, produces a steady cash-flow
them to look further afield for new opportunities and expand into potentially
huge new markets. But even more importantly, it gives them the opportunity to
fail and still live to acquire another day. GoogleÕs recent sale of MotorolaÕs
mobile division, at a paper loss of nearly $10 billion, would have
led to bankruptcy head-rolling at many firms but for Google it hardly left a
scratch. A $10 billion failure barely threaten a company whose last quarterly
revenues neared $17 billion, has cash on hand
of over $56.5 billion and whose market cap is now nearly
$380 billion.
Indeed, if any of the tech powers on track to become a full-fledged keiretsu, itÕs likely to be Google.
Over the past year the company has ventured into a host of fields, such as robotics,
energy, mapping, and driverless cars – fields that have great potential
but are only tangentially related to their core business. The recent acquisition
of Nest, a company founded by Apple alum Tony Fadell , brings Google into
the Òsmart homeÓ marketplace, part of the so-called Òinternet of thingsÓ. This
gives these firms a new capacity to harvest ever greater
information hauls from your once Òdumb,Ó but at least private, household
appliances.
These investments and cross-industry ties are changing firms like Google
in fundamental ways. As industry veteran Michael Mace observes,
Google has stopped being a Òunified product companyÓ
and is turning instead into what he calls Òa post-modern conglomerate.Ó Its
goal, he notes, is no longer to dominate search, or even the internet,
but to invest, and hopefully, control anything that uses information
technology, including everything from logistics and medical devices to the most
mundane household devices.
By investing widely and eating up developing markets, the Òthe Gang of
FourÓ internet companies—Microsoft, Apple, Facebook and Google—have two key advantages: almost
unlimited capital resources, and tech expertise and credibility. Allied with
venture firms, and a vast reservoir of technical experts, the tech oligarchies,
for example, already dominate such promising fields
robotics, with Silicon Valley home to half of all venture invested
in the field, over 70 percent of employees, and a whopping 90 percent of market
cap. Others are turning to space, a field once dominated by NASA, once a
key contractor for the Valley. Headquartered in the old aerospace center of Los
Angeles, Space X, the largest of the space startups, was founded by billionaire
Elon Musk, who previously founded PayPal and Tesla.
By 2013, SpaceÕs XÕs total
employment, including contractors, topped 3800.
Musk is not alone in the space game. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos
founded his own private space exploration company, Blue Origin, which has launched two vehicles
into space, Charon and Goddard. It intends to build
orbital space stations, and serves as a contractor for NASA. Like the nascent
space industryÕs third new player, Richard BransonÕs ÔVirgin Galactic,Õ these
firms are all the pet projects of billionaires fascinated by space. If NASA
continues to retreat from many areas of space exploration, it is likely that in
the future the heavens too may end up belonging to the oligarchs.
The Media power-shift: A Google or Amazon space-ship
may still be in the distant future, but we can already see the impact of the
new keiretsu on information and culture. In the past, more hardware-oriented
companies provided the ÒpipelinesÓ through which traditional media disseminated
their product. But increasingly, itÕs the tech oligarchs who control the news
and information industry. Google, by some estimates, already enjoys more
advertising revenues than either the newspaper or magazine industry.
And theyÕre positioned to take over the the
hardware side by supplanting the traditional telecommunications companies with
their own series of
global pipelines. This big tech takeover also previews a geographic
shift from traditional centers of power like New York and Los Angeles to the
new seats of influence, most notably Silicon Valley, San Francisco and the
Puget Sound area. The transitions
of power and influence have come at heavy costs.
As the new software-based media expanded over the last decade, massive
losses have pummeled newspapers, music, book and magazine publishing Since 200.
The paper publishing industry, traditionally concentrated in the New York area,
has lost some 250,000 jobs, while internet publishing
and portals generated some 70,000 new positions, many in the Bay Area or
Seattle. To the new oligarchs, the old media are just part of what one venture
capitalist derisively called Òthe paper economyÓ destined to be swept away by
the new digital aristocracy. As relatively young people who have already
amassed fortunes, the tech giants have the time to disseminate their views to
the public, both the mass and the influential higher echelons. Another $200 million new venture
with a mission to support largely left of center investigative reporting, is
being backed by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.
Buying up prestigious media outlets, an old tactic for consolidating
influence that was previously used by gilded age moguls like William Randolph
Hearst, has surfaced among the new tech giants, exemplified in the recent
purchase of the venerable New Republic by Facebook
co-founder, and Obama tech guru, Chris Hughes, who is reportedly
worth $850 million. But
perhaps more critical than buying old outlets will be the growth of their own
oligarch controlled news media. Yahoo is now the #1 news sites
in the U.S. with 110,000,000 monthly viewers, and Google News isnÕt far behind
at #4 with 65,000,000 users. The Valleyites are also
moving into the culture
business with both YouTube (owned by Google) and Netflix now
creating original entertainment content. The tech firms control over media is likely to become
even more pervasive as the millennial generation grows and the older cohorts
begin to die off. Among those over 50 only 15 percent, according to a Pew report
get their news over the internet; among those under 30, the number rises to 65
percent.
Impact on Innovation : Is this concentration of tech power a good
thing? To some extent, the country benefits from having a Google, Amazon,
Microsoft or Apple at the forefront of such fields as healthcare, robotics and
space. They possess the
resources and the technical know-how to develop and market new product lines
that smaller, more specialized start-ups might lack. Indeed the shift of
resources from social media and advertising to robotics or space travel has to
be considered a basically positive development. Unlike the social media
revolution, which appears to have done relatively little to
benefit the overall economy, the developments in space travel or
driverless cars, may provide advantages that are more widely shared. Yet, there is also a major problem with
over-rich and over-confident oligopolies. ItÕs a lesson demonstrated by JapanÕs
arc over the past two decades and in the story of the big three US automakers
and their era of domination – both examples show how concentration of
power can stifle innovation and positive growth. Already some
economists see a slowing in the pace of technical breakthroughs. In
the 1980s personal computer boom, scores of companies competing across a broad
array of tech sectors resulted in few long-term winners but a rapid evolution
of technology. In contrast, it is not easy to argue that GoogleÕs search
function or MicrosoftÕs code are any better today than
they were three or even five years ago.
As the tech firms move further from their entrepreneurial roots, one critic
notes, many take on Òa timid, bureaucratic spiritÓ that responds to
the needs of investors and focuses on preserving already established business
lines. Would we be better off with say, a garage-bound Steve Jobs developing
the software for robotics, rather than having development managed in a
corporate structure that answers the demands of Wall Street analysts? Trusting
a small, often closely knit group of investors, to oversee critical industries
of the future, does not seem to be the best strategy to maintain and deepen our
technological lead. Digital
innovation should be spurring the creation of new competitive companies. Yet, instead it is fostering an American version of the
Japanese keiretsu, where firms
like Amazon, Google, Apple and Microsoft try to use their unfathomable riches
to dominate the entire technological future. This is not a step forward but one
that can limit AmericansÕ ability to renew the entrepreneurial genius at the
heart of our national character.