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Antitrust Today

The Antitrust Week in Review

Posted  02/2/15
Here are some of the developments in antitrust news this past week that we found interesting and are following. . Federal courts often find the extent to which U.S. antitrust laws have a global reach to be one of the thorniest issues to deal with. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit is wrestling with this issue as it reviews a $147.8 million...

Baseball Antitrust Exemption Extends 93-Year Winning Streak In Federal Courts

Posted  01/21/15
By Nneka Ukpai Although federal courts may consider baseball’s antitrust exemption to make about as much sense as the , last week’s decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in shows that courts still consider themselves bound to invoke that anachronistic exemption to call antitrust plaintiffs out. According to a three-judge panel...

European Commission Announces Agreement To Cap Interchange Fees For Card-Based Payments

Posted  01/7/15
A View from Constantine Cannon’s London Office By Yulia Tosheva andJames Ashe-Taylor The European Commission that the European Parliament and the European Council have reached a long-awaited political agreement on the Commission’s proposal for a Regulation on Interchange Fees for Card-based Payment Transactions. The Regulation will introduce maximum fees for four-party card schemes’...

Reasonableness Of Licensing Royalties Is On Trial As Courts And Standard-Setting Organizations Wrestle With Standard-Essential Patents

Posted  01/5/15
By David Golden The ongoing battle over what constitutes a “reasonable” licensing royalty for standard-essential patents has now been joined by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit with its decision in Ericsson, Inc. v. D-Link Systems, Inc., concerning the alleged infringement of patents essential to the ubiquitous Wi-Fi networking technology. This definitional battle is also being fought in...

European Commission Seeks To Stamp Out Envelope Cartel With Fines Totaling 19.48 Million Euros

Posted  12/17/14
A View from Constantine Cannon’s London Office By Ana Rojo Prada and Richard Pike The European Commission that it has imposed fines totaling 19.48 million euros on five European envelope producers for coordinating prices and allocating customers through an anticompetitive cartel. The Commission imposed fines on the five companies – Bong (of Sweden), GPV and Hamelin (both of France),...

Net Neutrality – What’s In A Name?

Posted  11/12/14

By Robert Schwartz

Although President Obama has endorsed a specific approach to “net neutrality” – the principle that Internet service providers should treat all data on the Internet equally – the debate over whether and how the Federal Communications Commission should enforce that principle is still raging, and may well be decided by whoever wins the battle over defining “Internet access.” In...

European Commission Hits Telecoms With Fines Of 70 Million Euros For Abusing Slovak Broadband Market

Posted  10/30/14
A View from Constantine Cannon’s London Office By Yulia Tosheva andJames Ashe-Taylor The European Commission has signalled that it is not dialing down its scrutiny of the telecommunications sector by on Slovak Telekom and its parent company, Deutsche Telekom. On October 15, 2014, the Commission imposed a fine of 38,838,000 euros on Slovak Telekom and Deutsche...

European Commission Settles Two Swiss Franc-Related Derivatives Investigations

Posted  10/29/14
A View from Constantine Cannon’s London Office By Ana Rojo Prada andJames Ashe-Taylor The European Commission has settled two cartel investigations and sanctioned four major banks in the Swiss Franc-related derivatives market, imposing total fines of approximately 94 million euros, for violations of European Union antitrust rules. Interest rate derivatives (including swaps, futures and options) are...

Brussels Antitrust Seminar Demonstrates Shifting European Landscape For Competition Enforcement In Wake Of ECJ MasterCard Judgment

Posted  10/17/14
A View from Constantine Cannon’s London Office By Irene Fraileand Richard Pike The by the European Court of Justice (“ECJ”) in the MasterCard case is sparking a lively debate about how antitrust enforcement of payment system regimes should evolve in the European Union, as evidenced by an antitrust seminar co-sponsored by 91pornin Brussels on Monday. The ECJ’s

Apple’s Appellate Challenge Of E-Books Monitor Moves To Procedural Battlefield

Posted  10/1/14
By Allison F. Sheedy Apple’s battle in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit against a court-appointed external antitrust compliance monitor is winding its way through a procedural thicket as the Second Circuit prepares to consider the merits of Apple’s appeal. Apple is appealing an order by Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York refusing to disqualify...
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