US Trade Dominance Will Soon Begin to Crack

Wired
Wired
2w ago
In 2026, repealing anti-circumvention laws by some countries could break US tech companies' dominant control and reduce consumer costs globally.
US Trade Dominance Will Soon Begin to Crack
A What happened
In 2026, some countries may repeal anti-circumvention laws that protect US tech companies' digital locks. These laws have helped US firms earn hundreds of billions annually by blocking competition and third-party services. Repealing them could weaken US dominance, lower prices for consumers worldwide, and boost domestic tech sectors in those countries. This shift targets the core of US companies' profits and could reshape global trade relations.

Key insights

  • 1

    Targeted Strike on US Tech Giants: Repealing these laws specifically impacts companies like Tesla by undermining their digital lock-based business models, potentially causing share price collapses.

  • 2

    Potential Winners: Countries like Canada, Mexico, Denmark, Nigeria, Brazil, and Costa Rica could lead this change, developing their domestic tech markets by challenging US digital monopolies.

Takeaways

Repealing anti-circumvention laws could disrupt US tech dominance, reduce consumer costs globally, and foster growth in foreign tech sectors starting in 2026.

Topics

World & Politics Policy & Regulation Trade & Tariffs

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