FTC sends compliance letters to Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple over Take It Down Act

The Federal Trade Commission just put Big Tech on notice. The agency sent compliance letters to more than a dozen major technology companies, including Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple, pressing them to follow the requirements of the Take It Down Act.
The law, known as TIDA, targets the spread of non-consensual intimate imagery, the polite legal term for what most people call revenge porn. In English: if someone posts intimate images of you without your permission, platforms now have a legal obligation to take them down when you ask, and to keep them from popping back up.
What the Take It Down Act actually requires
The Take It Down Act creates a straightforward mandate for online platforms. When a person requests the removal of non-consensual intimate images, the platform must comply. It must also take steps to prevent those same images from being re-uploaded.
The recipients of the FTC’s letters span a wide range of the tech ecosystem. Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple are the marquee names, but the list also includes Automattic (the company behind WordPress), dating platforms Bumble and Match Group, and the gaming-adjacent chat platform Discord.
The FTC’s playbook: letters before lawsuits
The FTC has a well-established pattern of using warning letters as a first step, giving companies a window to correct course before enforcement actions escalate. Historically, these letters have prompted quick corrections without the need for litigation. The agency has deployed similar tactics against Amazon and Walmart in the past, and in most cases, companies quietly adjusted their practices rather than testing the FTC’s patience in court.
A broader pattern of Big Tech scrutiny
These letters are part of a multi-year escalation of regulatory pressure on major technology companies that has been building since at least 2019.
In 2020, the agency enforced transparency requirements around unreported acquisitions, demanding that major platforms disclose deals they had previously kept quiet. Antitrust investigations into Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple have covered everything from marketplace practices to app store policies to search dominance.
None of the companies named in the FTC’s letters have seen notable stock declines tied to the announcement. That’s a sharp contrast to past antitrust actions, where even the announcement of an investigation could shave percentage points off a company’s market cap.
The companies most exposed aren’t necessarily the largest ones. Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple have the resources and legal teams to adapt quickly. Smaller recipients like Bumble, Discord, and Automattic may face proportionally higher costs in building the technical systems needed to detect and block re-uploads.
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