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A group of privacy-focused organizations have signed a letter imploring US Congress leaders to schedule a vote on a bill that would hamper data collection by tech giants and promote user access to online privacy tools.

In its letter (opens in new tab) to Congress, addressed to the likes of Mitch McConnell and Nancy Pelosi, the alliance argued that the continued suppression of the American Innovation and Choice Online Act (AICOA) (opens in new tab) allows “dominant firms” to “limit competition and restrict user choice” when accessing privacy-focused technologies and products.

It also accused tech giants of forcing users into accepting their policies of “perpetual surveillance” because of their positions as “gatekeepers”, and of using their “influence in society” to steer users away from rival services more committed to privacy.

Online privacy in the US

Signatories included the likes of DuckDuckGo, Proton, Brave and Mozilla, among others, representing sectors ranging from VPN and search to web browsers, office software, and more.

The letter to Congress fighting for the revival of the AICOA hit back at the idea that the US technology industry is a free market. The 13 signatories, all of which are relatively small in stature, claim the tech giants deliberately wield the depth and breadth of their product portfolios to establish unassailable monopolies.

However, the resources and lobbying power at the disposal of companies like Google and Meta mean the economic interests of corporations have often taken precedence over the online privacy of the people that use their platforms.

In this case, as the bill poses a direct threat to large tech companies’ abilities to collect data and squash the push for online privacy in the US, it’s likely that tech giants will succeed in persuading politicians to suppress the AICOA, at least in part because the thirteen-strong collective does not have the same resources at its disposal.

As a result, the AICOA is unlikely to be tabled for discussion, and even more unlikely to be passed into law before the November midterms, by a House of Representatives with a slim Democratic majority of nine and an evenly split Senate. As for the fate of the bill after the midterms, only time will tell.

TechRadar Pro has asked Meta and Google for a response to the letter to Congress.