The Atlantic

The Dumb Fact of Google Money

A Beltway scandal that calls into question the independence of a Google-backed think tank strengthens the argument that tech has too much money.
Source: Larry Downing / Reuters

Washington, D.C., woke up to a humdinger of a story today, a flash portrait that shows the relationship between money, power, and ideas—and highlights the potential for intellectual corruption that has accompanied the flood of Big Tech money into the capital.

The New York Times reported that the New America Foundation, the digital-savvy center-left think tank, might have pushed out Barry Lynn, a ferocious and influential critic of “platform monopolies” like, for example, Alphabet (née Google). After Google was hit with a 2.42 billion–euro fine by the European Commission in June, Lynn posted a congratulatory note to the regulators and a call for action by American anti-trust officials.

New America, meanwhile, has received more than $20 million since

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