December 11, 2017 | New York Law Journal
The DOJ's Challenge to the AT&T/Time Warner DealIn their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte discuss the key issues the D.C. District Court is likely to consider in assessing the DOJ's antitrust case against AT&T/Time Warner.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
12 minute read
November 13, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Trump's Antitrust Enforcers: Limited Intervention Remains the Most Likely ApproachIn their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: A slew of departures from the two agencies with shared responsibility for federal antitrust enforcement followed the entrance of the new administration into office, presenting President Donald J. Trump with an unprecedented opportunity to reconfigure the U.S. antitrust landscape through several key appointments.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
32 minute read
October 11, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Has the Pendulum Swung? Potential for Convergence in U.S./EU Enforcement Post-IntelIn their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte discuss a September 2017 decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union, which set aside a 2014 General Court of the EU judgment that upheld a €1.06 billion fine imposed by the European Commission on Intel for abuse of its monopoly position.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
28 minute read
September 08, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Big Data, Web 'Scraping' and Competition Law: The Debate ContinuesAntitrust Trade and Practice columnists, Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: Big Data is a complex issue—different firms and individuals have different access to different sources of data, and want to use that data in different ways. This complexity means that the legality of some methods of culling and using Big Data remains unclear. A recent case signals a shift in the way courts may be viewing attempts to restrict one method of accumulating data that has sparked recent legal debate: data scraping.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
9 minute read
August 07, 2017 | New York Law Journal
'A Better Deal' on Antitrust Enforcement: Can Democrats Catch the Populist Wave?Antitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: Although there was no meaningful proposal by Congress during the Obama administration to re-write the antitrust laws to make big "bad" once again, to regulate the pricing of lawful monopolists, or to use the antitrust laws as a tool for social and economic engineering, harkening back to the trust-busting days of old, the 2018 midterm elections beckon, and Congressional Democrats do not want to miss the populist wave a second time.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
21 minute read
July 17, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Vitamin C Litigation: Window Into Trump White House International Relations?Antitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: Just before the U.S. Supreme Court's most recent term expired, the justices set the stage for a potential test of the Trump administration's ideological vigor. By inviting Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall's office to "file a brief ... expressing the views of the United States" regarding 'In re Vitamin C Antitrust Litigation,' the court has offered President Donald Trump and his government an opportunity to expound on one of the president's most popular talking points pre- and post-campaign—the issue of China's abuses of international trade.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
9 minute read
June 12, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Algorithms and 'Twombly': An Inevitable Collision CourseAntitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write that pricing algorithms present a number of unique opportunities to businesses to improve their processes and efficiency. Sellers can automatically adjust their conduct with the demands of the market, increasing efficiency and saving resources and money. However, critics worry that because algorithms have become so advanced, they may enable new forms of anticompetitive coordination that were not possible before.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
8 minute read
May 08, 2017 | New York Law Journal
So Long, 'Net Neutrality'?Antitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: On April 26, 2017, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai explicitly confirmed what we all presumed, all but declaring war on the regulation that enabled the FCC to adopt the net neutrality rules. For all practical purposes, practitioners and their clients should prepare themselves for a world without net neutrality regulatory framework—i.e., one in which antitrust and the courts will police the Internet highway.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
17 minute read
April 10, 2017 | New York Law Journal
Why Antitrust Has Little or No Role in the Sports Carriage FightsIn their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte review two recent disputes offer a window into whether and when antitrust regulators, to protect downstream consumers, will police negotiations between broadcast distributors and Regional Sports Networks that have exclusive rights to content for a team or a group of teams.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
14 minute read
March 13, 2017 | New York Law Journal
A Moment of Repose: The FTC's Merger Remedy StudyAntitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte write: In the wake of two successful merger challenges by the Department of Justice Antitrust Division, the Federal Trade Commission has released a study on merger remedies, providing some lessons that parties to future proposed mergers would be wise to heed.
By Shepard Goldfein and James Keyte
18 minute read
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