And, that is what scares me.
10:53 AM, . Nov 29, 2021
Facebook-Giphy deal set to be blocked by UK regulator
The United Kingdom’s competition regulator is expected to block Facebook’s acquisition of GIF platform Giphy in the upcoming days in an escalation of the watchdog's assault on Big Tech, the Financial Times reported.
Tech crackdown: The Competition and Markets Authority is set to reverse the Facebook-Giphy deal in what would be the first time the watchdog has reversed a Big Tech acquisition, the report said.
Penaly on Facebook: The regulator had in October fined the social media giant £50.5 million for breaching an order that was imposed during an investigation into its purchase of Giphy. The regulator had also imposed an additional £500,000 penalty for changing a chief compliance officer twice without consent.
Facebook bought Giphy, a website for making and sharing animated images, or GIFs, in May last year to integrate it with its photo-sharing app Instagram. The deal was then pegged at $400 million by Axios.
Meanwhile, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that Facebook will show it has no interest in making the online world safe if it quits the country over laws holding it liable for defamtion on its platform.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
Holding 'em accountable: Australia plans to make social media platforms share the identities of people with anonymous accounts if another person accuses them of defamation. If they fail to give that information, it must assume legal liability. The proposed law would also make social media operators legally responsible for defamatory comments beneath publishers' posts on their platforms.
Quote: It was not free speech “to hide in your basement as a masked troll and abuse and harass and stalk people”, he said. “If you want to say something, then you should say who you are, and if the social media company lets you do that with a mask on, then we'll hold them to account.”
In February, global social media companies threatened to quit Australia over laws making them pay media outlets for the content appearing on their websites.
upGrad makes first overseas deal
upGrad cofounder Ronnie Screwvala.
upGrad has agreed to acquire Global Study Partners (GSP), the largest study abroad company in Australia, for A$16 million, with a commitment of a further A$10 million in the future.
The edtech unicorn, which has earmarked $250 million for M&A deals, has entered into an acquisition agreement to buy 100% of Global Study Partners for A$16 million with a commitment of a further A$10 million in the future, the Ronnie Screwvala-promoted firm said.
The acquisition marks the first international acquisition for upGrad and strengthens its foray into the study abroad space, one of the fastest-growing segments worldwide.
Quote: "As an integrated edtech leader, we span the entire gamut of a learner's need from the age of 18-50, and in that, study abroad is a key growth initiative for us—not just out of India, which is one of the two largest markets but also for our learners internationally," Screwvala said.
Consolidation move: upGrad recently consolidated its three Indian subsidiaries—upGrad Campus, upGrad Jeet and upGrad KnowledgeHut—to create one parent company in India. The merged entity would cover the entire gamut of higher educational technology offerings, catering to college learners and working professionals.
Other Done Deals
■ Private equity firm Clearlake Capital has struck a deal to buy Quest Software Inc. from Francisco Partners, valuing the Aliso Viejo, California-based company at $5.4 billion including debt, WSJ reported.
Today's ETtech Top 5 newsletter was curated by Arun Padmanabhan in New Delhi.

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