Big tech eyes Belgium conference for clues on crackdown

Top tech executives are keeping close tabs on a seemingly obscure conference being held Tuesday in Belgium for clues on how global anti-trust regulators are planning to crack down on the industry, FOX Business has learned.

The conference has attracted a slew of regulators from Europe and the United States, including state attorneys general and antitrust officials from the Trump administration, which has sparked concerns for mega-companies that face unprecedented regulatory scrutiny of their business practices.

Making matters even more unsettling for Alphabet’s Google, one of the biggest targets in the various probes is the person hosting the event: Cristina Caffarra, a vice president at the economic consulting firm Charles River Associates.

Caffarra has consulted for Google competitors and she has been retained as an adviser in the investigation of Google by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, FOX Business has learned.

Paxton is mounting one of the most aggressive investigations into Google’s business practices by looking at whether the company is using its search engine to benefit itself as opposed to other companies, thus violating antitrust laws. Caffarra is working as an unpaid adviser to Paxton, but in a recent filing in Texas State, Google said it wanted assurances that Caffara would not share confidential information gleaned from the probe with its competitors.

In the filing, Google cited Caffarra’s business with Microsoft, NewsCorp and Russian search engine Yandex. FOX Business, a subsidiary of FOX Corporation, was formerly part of the same company as Newscorp before the two split in 2013. Caffarra is not doing work for those companies now, thus people close to her say there is no conflict of interest in her advising Paxton. Like other experts with her background, she has always maintained a strict policy of confidentiality, these people add.

Google, which has denied that it’s done anything wrong, declined to comment for this article. Paxton also declined comment, as did Caffarra and a spokesman for Charles River Associates.

“Given the ongoing investigations of Google and Facebook across Europe [European Commission and European Union member states], it's useful for agencies to talk,” one person close to the conference who asked not to be named tells FOX Business. “This happens all the time.”

The conference, titled “Antitrust in Times of Upheaval — a Global Conversation,” was attended by about 1,000 business executives and regulators, including tech officials from Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple. Trump antitrust chief Makan Delharim was initially listed as a speaker but because of a scheduling conflict, Delharim could not attend, a spokesman said. The Justice Department’s antitrust division sent other representatives, the spokesman said.