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Big Tech told Congress it has plenty of competitors. It’s crushing them all.

Here are our counterpoints to the points Amazon, Apple, Google, and Facebook made during their House antitrust hearing.

Google logo during Halloween.
Google logo during Halloween.
Google and other big tech companies did their best to fight off the scary prospect of antitrust regulations during a House hearing.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Congress grilled representatives from Big Tech companies Tuesday during a much-anticipated antitrust hearing, asking about everything from the size of their businesses to their potentially anti-competitive practices. The hearing came amid scrutiny from federal agencies, as well as calls by some politicians to break up or at least more strictly regulate the most valuable companies in the world.

In response, representatives from Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple had one consistent defense: If we’re so big and bad, how come we have so many competitors? Each of the opening statements prepared by the tech execs included some variation of the word “compete” at least a dozen times.

This isn’t a new playbook, by the way: Giant companies trying to convince Washington regulators to bless their mergers (see: Comcast/NBCUniversal, AT&T/Time Warner) do so by insisting that they face plenty of existential threats from competition. (Not surprisingly, they usually tell their shareholders a different story.)

Below is a sample of some of the defensive claims Big Tech made yesterday as it tried to dissuade politicians from regulating their massive businesses. We’ve provided some counterpoints:

Recode and Vox have joined forces to uncover and explain how our digital world is changing — and changing us. Subscribe to Recode podcasts to hear Kara Swisher and Peter Kafka lead the tough conversations the technology industry needs today.

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