Big Tech Policy
Navigate forward to interact with the calendar and select a date. Press the question mark key to get the keyboard shortcuts for changing dates.
Navigate backward to interact with the calendar and select a date. Press the question mark key to get the keyboard shortcuts for changing dates.
ITIF’s Aegis Project for Defending U.S. Technology Leadership is dedicated to helping the United States prevail in its techno-economic power struggle with China by identifying and opposing domestic and international laws and regulations that undermine the competitive position of major U.S. tech companies. Policymakers must understand that limiting attacks on U.S. tech leaders is critical for America’s global power and leadership.
More Publications and Events
December 12, 2025|Blogs
Why the DMA Interoperability Investigations Poison Innovation
The DMA’s forced interoperability undermines platform differentiation, weakens security and reliability, and ultimately leaves European consumers with degraded versions of global technologies.
December 11, 2025|Blogs
The X Fine Highlights Europe’s Growing Regulatory Overreach
The European Commission’s €120 million DSA fine against X is arbitrary and overreaching. The U.S. government should continue pushing back against foreign regulations that harm American platforms and citizens.
December 5, 2025|Blogs
Getting Korea's Narrative Right: AGI Is a Productivity Shock, Not a Justification for Public Compute
Some Korean commentary misreads AGI as a threat to labor and a rationale for public compute. In reality, AGI is better understood as a productivity shock that expands economic output. Resetting the narrative is essential for Korea to pursue policies that strengthen private-sector capacity, support AI diffusion, and enhance innovation.
December 4, 2025|Events
Policy Solutions to Non-Tariff Attacks on U.S. Technology Leadership
Watch now for an expert panel discussion as we discuss a new ITIF report on policy solutions to non-tariff attacks (NTAs), and explore the stakes for U.S. innovation, technology leadership, and global competitiveness.
November 12, 2025|Blogs
iRobot's Avoidable Predicament: An Antitrust Enforcement Blunder
The failure of the Amazon/iRobot transaction, which was opposed by EU and U.S. antitrust authorities, has had catastrophic consequences for the American robotics firm and played into the hands of Chinese robot manufacturing rivals.
November 7, 2025|Blogs
EU Should Not Block Big Tech from Financial Data Access
The EU’s move to bar major U.S. tech companies from participating in its new financial data-sharing framework (FiDA) is a protectionist proposal that would limit consumer choice, suppress innovation, and undermine FiDA’s potential benefits.
November 4, 2025|Blogs
Big Tech Goes to SCOTUS? Google’s Petition in Epic v. Google Makes the Case
Google’s petition in Epic v. Google raises big questions about key antitrust liability and remedial standards, foreshadowing similar arguments on appeal in the DOJ v. Google search case.
October 30, 2025|Blogs
Canada’s Amazon Test: Encouraging Competition or Undermining It?
Canada’s first major test of its reformed competition law centers on Amazon’s pricing rules, but the Competition Bureau’s case risks punishing a policy that lowers prices for consumers and mistaking competition on the merits for anticompetitive conduct.
October 29, 2025|Presentations
Big Tech and Europe
Joseph Coniglio speaks about Europe's big tech regulations at an event hosted by Broadband Breakfast.
October 10, 2025|Blogs
Europe’s Interoperability Push Undermines Western Tech Leadership
The EU’s overbroad interoperability mandates target U.S. tech firms, delay new features for European users, and open the door for China to challenge Western tech leadership.




