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Elizabeth Warren is going after Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook, saying the company's apps should be split up so they 'outdo each other to protect your privacy'

Oct 2, 2019, 20:07 IST

2020 Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth WarrenJohn Locher/AP Images

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United States presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren is going after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

On Tuesday, The Verge's Casey Newton published a transcript of audio leaked from a July town hall meeting where Zuckerberg told employees that he would "go to the mat and fight" any regulation seeking to break up the social media giant. Zuckerberg was answering a question from an employee that directly addressed Warren's plan, introduced in early 2019, to break up so-called "big tech" companies like Amazon, Google, and Facebook.

Under Warren's proposed plan, Facebook would have to undo its acquisitions of WhatsApp and Instagram.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.Reuters

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"If someone's going to try to threaten something that existential, you go to the mat and you fight," Zuckerberg told employees in July. "If she gets elected president, then I would bet that we will have a legal challenge. And I would bet that we will win the legal challenge."

Warren hit back at Zuckerberg's comments in a series of statements on Twitter on Tuesday afternoon.

"Facebook is doing pretty well right now," she said. "They've acquired potential competitors WhatsApp and Instagram. More than 85% of all social networking traffic goes through sites owned or operated by Facebook. They've got a lot of power - and face little competition or accountability."

It's not clear what the source of the statistic is, but it appears to be pulled from the GlobalWebIndex 2018 report on social media; the Warren campaign didn't immediately respond to a request for clarification.

Read more: Elizabeth Warren's plan to regulate tech giants would force Facebook to break up with WhatsApp and Instagram

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The messaging lines up with Warren's ongoing criticism of the so-called "big tech" companies like Amazon, Google, and Facebook.

"America's biggest tech companies are controlling more and more of our digital lives," Warren wrote in a campaign email in March announcing the plan. The subject line: "It's time to break up Amazon, Google, and Facebook."

She got more specific in a series of tweets on Tuesday afternoon:

"Tech giants shouldn't be able to wield enough power to undermine our democracy," Warren said in a follow up tweet.

Facebook representatives did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment on Warren's statements.

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