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Meta’s antitrust trial slide redactions aren’t actually hiding anything

The redactions in Meta’s document are just easy-to-remove layers.

The redactions in Meta’s document are just easy-to-remove layers.

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STKS487_ANTITRUST_2__STK043_META
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images
Wes Davis
is a former weekend editor who covered tech and entertainment. He has written news, reviews, and more as a tech journalist since 2020.

A PDF of Meta’s opening statement slides in its FTC antitrust hearing yesterday contains easy-to-remove redactions that make it possible to see everything the company didn’t want made public, The Verge has discovered.

Thanks to the poor redactions, we can see sections comparing the use of Apple’s Messages app to Meta apps like Instagram and WhatsApp. The original slide displayed only a quote from Apple director of product marketing Ronak Shah describing an iMessage “core use case” allegedly similar to Facebook’s. Another, labeled “Snapchat in 2020: Competitors Are Succeeding and Not Just Meta Apps,” says that “Tiktok, Insta, FB, Messengers and YouTube” are “thriving.”

A comparison of a pre- and- post-redacted slide from Meta’s opening statement.
A comparison of a pre- and- post-redacted slide from Meta’s opening statement.
Screenshots: Meta opening statement / FTC v. Meta Platforms, Inc.

Those aren’t especially juicy details; at most, it looks like someone was just being cautious — or trying to be, anyway — with slides that came from other companies’ internal meetings. But the leak calls to mind mid-2023, when Sony spilled PlayStation secrets by using sharpie to hide information — which let the darker printed ink below be visible under, say, the bright light of a document scanner — in court documents shared in the Microsoft antitrust trial.

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