By Tom McParland | December 10, 2019
The panel turned aside arguments that the courts should not apply the pleading standards of securities law to antitrust factual claims at the heart of the suit.
By Steve Williams and Gayatri Raghunandan | December 9, 2019
Antitrust laws serve vital government interests by promoting free competition and innovation and protecting consumer welfare. The language of the Sherman Act and Clayton Act and their state law analogues, as well as their legislative histories, make that clear.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | December 9, 2019
In their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz discuss the legal implications stemming from the DOJ's decision to ask a federal district court to terminate the Paramount Consent Decrees, a set of rules governing major film studios for the last 70 years.
By Jenna Greene | December 6, 2019
'We have grown used to flying under the radar, even though we have been prevailing in high profile cases since inception,' Noah Hagey said. 'You might say that underestimation is one of our strategic advantages.'
By Scott Graham | December 2, 2019
A three-judge panel sounded highly skeptical of U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh's decision to certify a nationwide consumer class based on California antitrust law. But they suggested that a California only class—or California plus a handful of other states—might pass muster.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Carl W. Hittinger and Jeanne-Michele Mariani | November 27, 2019
On Nov. 13, House lawmaker Rep. David Cicilline, who has been leading the investigation into tech competition, suggested a new tactic to prevent major Silicon Valley firms from making acquisitions—a merger moratorium until the federal government's top two antitrust enforcers are finished with their own probes into the tech sector.
By Greg Land | November 26, 2019
An Atlanta digital advertising company said it had revenues of more than $100 million between 2014 and 2016 but that Google has effectively put it out of business using illegal tactics since then.
By Greg Land | November 26, 2019
The complaint filed by Atlanta ad firm Inform Inc. and lawyers at Herman Jones accuses Google of using its market power to eviserate competition at the expense of consumers and innovation.
By Greg Land | November 26, 2019
The complaint filed by Atlanta ad firm Inform Inc. and lawyers at Herman Jones accuses Google of using its market power to eviscerate competition at the expense of consumers and innovation.
By Greg Land | November 26, 2019
An Atlanta digital advertising company said it had revenues of more than $100 million between 2014 and 2016 but that Google has effectively put it out of business using illegal tactics since then.
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