Majority of tech staffers say Big Tech wields too much power in new survey

Workers inside Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Facebook and others are starting to express that they believe that tech giants wield too much cultural and economic power.

Amid increased scrutiny of the technology industry from consumers and various governments, Protocol

carried out a survey of about 1,504 tech company employees. The outlet asked a variety of questions, from issues with China or whether Big Tech should be broken up.

When asked whether Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Alphabet have too much power, 77% of respondents answered yes and only 8% disagreed. Protocol asked the same question about the industry as a whole, and found similar results with 78% agreeing or strongly agreeing.

Credit: Protocol

In a related line of questioning, about 40% of respondents said that technology does more harm than good. Just over 40% also said they believed that Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple should be broken up.

A majority of those surveyed also said they want Section 230 reform, though the answers weren’t so black and white. Only 62% of respondents said they knew what Section 230, but three quarters of those people said the law should be reformed.

Credit: Protocol

However, most believe that the core principles of Section 230 protections should remain the same, with 65% agreeing with the statement that “tech companies should not be held liable for the content on their sites and products.” A whopping 82% of respondents also realize that Section 230 could have an impact on “more than just big tech companies.”

On China, 56% of the tech employees say that U.S. restrictions on Chinese technology firms have gone too far. 60% of those respondents also added that U.S. companies should work more closely with China-based counterparts.

Credit: Protocol

However, 46% said that they agreed with the statement that Huawei should be banned from the U.S., and 58% said that a cold war with China would “cripple U.S. tech companies.”

A majority of respondents also want regulation for artificial intelligence, with 73% agreeing that it’s time for the government to step in. On a separate note, 44% of those surveyed said that Big Tech should stop working with law enforcement entities. A smaller portion, 34%, disagreed with that answer.

Protocol’s survey asked questions of 1,504 employees across the U.S. The publication notes that those staffers ranged from “C-suite level executives to associates.” Nearly 40% are from large technology companies with more than 1,000 employees and annual revenues eclipsing $500 million.

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