PREDICTIONS: The most important things that will happen in tech in 2018 (AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL, FB, TWTR, DIS)
new year's eve 2018
new year's eve 2018

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

  • The tech industry will get bigger and more powerful in 2018.

  • But the backlash against tech that came to the fore in 2017 isn't going away.

  • Predictions: The industry will face growing calls for regulation, Netflix is in big trouble, and the augmented reality bubble will burst.



It was a rough year for Big Tech, at least aside from members' financial results.

After years of unencumbered growth and fawning coverage in the press, the tech giants got hit with a huge backlash in 2017, largely concerning their role in society. After that public relations disaster, no one is probably more glad to see the year come to a close than the members of Big Tech. Unfortunately for those companies, there are few signs the backlash will abate in 2018.

But a continuation of the giants' image troubles isn't the only thing we can expect in the coming year. Instead, the tech industry and its biggest members are likely to see a mix of good and bad in 2018.

As we say goodbye to 2017, here are some of the most important things I think will happen in tech next year.

There will be a bigger push for regulation in the US

The big tech companies grew into behemoths without having to worry much about the US government stepping in to curb their power or dictate how they did things. In fact no one in the halls of power really talked seriously about regulating Big Tech.

mark warner
mark warner

REUTERS/Kevin LamarqueBut that's changing. The populist backlash against the tech giants this year bled into the halls of the Senate, culminating in one of the first significant efforts to regulate some of those companies — the introduction of the Honest Ads Act. That proposed law would have required people placing political ads on internet sites such as Facebook and Google to follow the same transparency rules that apply to television, radio, and print.

While that bill stalled, the push for regulation is only going to continue. And the proposed rules could cover a lot more than just political ads. 

For example, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner has held meetings with experts looking into whether or not tech companies intentionally make products addictive, according to Axios. The meetings come as a growing number of such experts are warning that the dopamine hit you get whenever your Instagram post gets 100+ likes may not be incidental, but an intended result of the design of such features.

Expect to see additional inquiries along the lines of Warner's. And don't be surprised if you see more bills proposed that might target not only political ads and addiction, but privacy and the industry's arguably anticompetitive practices.