By C. Ryan Barber | June 11, 2019
Makan Delrahim, the DOJ's antitrust leader, has fired warning shots at Big Tech. Plus: new bipartisan legislation could overhaul foreign-lobbying enforcement. Scroll down for our weekly snapshot Who Got the Work, and check out our moves roundup. Thanks for reading!
By Phillip Bantz | June 11, 2019
The companies allegedly schemed to avoid federal antitrust laws and expedite Canon's $6.1 billion acquisition of Toshiba subsidiary Toshiba Medical Systems Corp. in 2016.
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | June 10, 2019
In their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz write: On May 21, California federal judge Lucy Koh ordered a sweeping injunction against cellphone chipmaker Qualcomm, requiring the company to renegotiate its licenses and alter its business model. The case was long-anticipated to have a significant impact on intellectual property law and the technology industry by clarifying the obligations of standard essential patent holders to license their technology on fair terms and deal with competitors. It has exposed tensions between the DOJ and FTC, and within the FTC itself, and public scrutiny is far from over as the case heads to the Ninth Circuit on appeal.
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | June 10, 2019
The ruling has exposed tensions between the DOJ and FTC, and within the FTC itself, and public scrutiny is far from over as the case heads to the Ninth Circuit on appeal.
By Caroline Spiezio | June 5, 2019
It's been a year of fines, complaints and calls to investigate Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook at home and abroad, escalating this week with the House Judiciary Committee's probe into major U.S. tech companies' competitive practices and market share. Here's a look at a year of tech's tumbles with antitrust.
By Ross Todd | June 4, 2019
Lawyers at Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on behalf of developers who claim Apple's app store is "exclusive and anti-competitive by design" in ways that violate the federal antitrust laws.
By Ross Todd | June 4, 2019
Lawyers at Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on behalf of developers who claim Apple's app store is "exclusive and anti-competitive by design" in ways that violate the federal antitrust laws.
By Caroline Spiezio | June 4, 2019
The House Judiciary Committee is looking into large tech companies' market dominance and possible antitrust violations, as Silicon Valley's biggest names face increased scrutiny at home and in Europe.
By Scott Graham | June 4, 2019
Latham's Matthew Moore argued that IV has aggregated thousands of patents that banks need to do business. But Judge William Bryson wondered how that differs from any industry giant with a massive IP portfolio.
By Scott Graham | June 4, 2019
Latham's Matthew Moore argued that IV has aggregated thousands of patents that banks need to do business. But Judge William Bryson wondered how that differs from any industry giant with a massive IP portfolio.
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