By Chris Sanders
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Google, Facebook and Amazon are using their size, reach and technology prowess to help Americans cope with the coronavirus crisis, an opportunity for Big Tech to counter a drumbeat of criticism in Washington.
The three companies have a chance to burnish their images amid intense U.S. regulatory scrutiny by the Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission, state attorneys general and the House Judiciary Committee, who accuse the companies of unfairly using their clout to defend market share or expand into adjacent markets.
Washington lawmakers from both parties regularly attack the companies with a broad range of accusations, from doing too little to protect children to aiding hucksters who use the coronavirus outbreak to rip people off.
But the coronavirus pandemic has offered the companies, all of whom hold sizable cash reserves and have an outsized capacity to influence American lives, a chance to play the role of savior while casting aside the image of profiteering data usurpers.
“I’m glad that they’re willing to help,” Senator Josh Hawley, a Republican, said of Google’s efforts to develop screening mechanisms for the virus. “I hope that they’re actually helping and not using this as an opportunity to drum up business.”
Alphabet Inc’s
“Google cozying up to the government doesn’t hurt,” said Andre Barlow, an antitrust expert with the law firm Doyle, Barlow & Mazard. “Obviously there are a lot of factors that are weighed in the antitrust investigation, which could go either way.”
Facebook Inc
Then Amazon.com Inc
“This is an opportunity to reset how people think about technology companies,” said Scott Wallsten, president of the Technology Policy Institute, which counts all three companies among its members.
(Reporting by Chris Sanders in Washington; Additional reporting by Nandita Bose and Diane Bartz in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis)





