Monday, May 19, 2025

The Enforcement Dilemmas in Europe’s Digital Rulebook

 G. de Gregorio, S. Demkova, here

Introduction to the Foundations and Regulation of Generative AI

 AAVV, here.

Mozilla's Amicus Curiae, Unsealed (?)

 Here.

AI: Il Garante sanziona la società che gestisce il chatbot “Replika”

 Qui.

Deepseek, il Garante della privacy ha un piano drastico per bloccarlo del tutto in Italia

 Wired, here.

Damages Actions Against Digital Gatekeepers for Breaches of EU Antitrust Law and the DMA: A German Perspective

 J.-U. Franck, here

Dear DMA Team (just wrote, sent...And the DMA Team wrote back!)

 

 

 

Dear DMA Team,

It has been nearly a month since the non-compliance decisions were announced. May we kindly inquire when they will finally be published? The delay is detrimental to growth, innovation, public opinion and research.

Thank you and kind regards.

 

 

 

 

Very kind response from the DMA Team 💙


Dear Madam,
 
Thank you for your message related to the publication of the Meta Non-Compliance Decision. DG Competition, DG Communications Networks, Content and Technology and Meta are establishing a public version of the decision which does not contain any business secrets or other confidential information. In this regard, we invite you to check the DMA website regularly in order to remain aware of any further developments. The Commission will make a non-confidential version of the document available on its website at the following address in the near future: https://digital-markets-act-cases.ec.europa.eu/cases/DMA.100055.

Kind regards,
The EC DMA team
 
 
 
In the meanwhile, however, I moved to a different research topic.  [Thinking: would it help if you had more resources? Like the Commission already has for the DSA?]

Regulatory dialogues

 


AI and copyright: The training of general-purpose AI

 EP Think Tank, here.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

DMA: Behind the Scenes

 F. Chirico, here.

Meta 5(2) decision mentioned at 1:04.  Filomena said she was following this case directly. Glad that I had the chance to present to her and the other conference attendees our views in October last year.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Bad, really bad for US companies: PayPal launches iPhone NFC payments in Germany

 The Verge, here.

In some areas, the complementarity between DMA and competition enforcement worked really well...

5+ years of anticompetitive practices followed by some commitments to better behave in the future?

If you're Big Something, you're perfectly entitled to rationally behave as you like. EU competition law provides you plenty of incentives to do that!

EC, here

Has the Ombudsman's proceeding ended, BTW? 


Friday, May 16, 2025

Datenschutz-Urteil: Google hat Griff nach Nutzerdaten unzulässig vereinfacht

 Verbraucherzentrale, hier

Urteil hier.

From the archives: Does this mean that Google is currently using your health data to train GenAI, possibly?

 


Competition in the Provision of Cloud Computing Services

 OECD, Background Note here

(Already on my syllabus).

Viral outrage over Apple’s EU payment warnings misses key fact [indeed 😀: non-compliance with the DMA!]

The Verge, here

"Under the DMA, app developers distributing their apps via Apple's App Store should be able to inform customers, free of charge, of alternative offers outside the App Store, steer them to those offers and allow them to make purchases.

"The Commission found that Apple fails to comply with this obligation. Due to a number of restrictions imposed by Apple, app developers cannot fully benefit from the advantages of alternative distribution channels outside the App Store. Similarly, consumers cannot fully benefit from alternative and cheaper offers as Apple prevents app developers from directly informing consumers of such offers. The company has failed to demonstrate that these restrictions are objectively necessary and proportionate" 

Not covered, Apple is telling us. Non-compliance decisions not published yet. We were used to waiting for months (years?) for the publication of 101 and 102 decisions but the DMA was supposed to be much quicker and there is also the need to ensure adaptation.

Ripples in the Generative-AI Pond

Across the competition policy landscape, many are jostling for vantage over GenAI—a scramble laid bare in the ICN sessions in Edinburgh last week and, at the same moment, in the remedies phase of US v Google. In Europe, it was the German Verbraucherzentrale that dropped the first pebble, swiftly followed by NOYB, and the ripples carry particular weight in the shadow of the Court’s 2023 Meta ruling—a fact of which Meta is, needless to say, acutely aware.

[More soon in a paper].




Europe plots escape hatch from the enshittification of search

 The Register, here.

Microsoft Cuts Off Access to Bing Search Data as It Shifts Focus to Chatbots

Wired, here.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Apple is placing warnings on EU apps that don’t use App Store payments

 The Verge, here.

FAIR PLAY: HOW COMPETITION POLICY CAN DRIVE GROWTH

 G. Dibb, T. Valletti, here.

Y Combinator says Google is a ‘monopolist’ that has ‘stunted’ the startup ecosystem

 TechCrunch, here

"TechCrunch asked YC how it would respond to this critique, and whether it has any specific examples of areas that it probably would have funded had it not been for Google. So far, YC hasn’t responded to our comment request"

‘No-poach’ agreements are, generally, restrictive ‘by object’

AG Emiliou, here

Strategic steer to the Competition and Markets Authority: Final Cut

 Your Gov, here


Mögliche Unterlassungsverfügung der VZNRW bedroht deutsche KI-Innovation, Wirtschaftswachstum und den EU-Binnenmarkt

 

Seriously worrying about deutsche KI-Innovation

   Meta, hier.

Innovation and growth in the EU (also in the AI age)? Properly enforce the GDPR [and the DMA, WB]!

 J. Ryan, here.

John Stanley Metcalfe – 20 March 1946 to 15 March 2025

 Here.

Le DMA ne doit pas être un tigre de papier

 


S. Yon-Courtin, ici.

EU ruling: tracking-based advertising by Google, Microsoft, Amazon, X, across Europe has no legal basis

 ICCL, here

Ruling here.

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Antitrust Review Episode 42: In conversation with Aviv Nevo

 Podcast here.

House of Lords pushes back against government’s AI plans

 The Guardian, here.

Break Up Alphabet? It May Be the ‘Only Way Forward’ for Google Stock.

 Barron's, here.

EU Commission opens door for ‘targeted changes’ to AI Act

 Politico.eu, here.

Market Tipping

 Danish CA, here.

Le DIGITAL MARKETS ACT pour les nuls ;-)

 P. Bichet, ici.

noyb sends Meta 'cease and desist' letter over AI training. European Class Action as potential next step

 


Noyb, here.

Commission organises DMA compliance workshops with Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta and Microsoft

 EC, here

"The fabric of the DMA does not assign a central or institutionalised role to actual
or potential competitors in the enforcement process. The Commission has
nevertheless sought to make the process more participatory by organising a series
of public compliance workshops. This format has allowed stakeholders to voice
concerns and provide input on specific aspects of the compliance measures
adopted by gatekeepers, in an effort to promote broader engagement and
transparency in the enforcement of the DMA. The most significant contribution
to emerge from the public workshops has been the ability of stakeholders to flag
potential compliance issues linked to the technological solutions proposed by
gatekeepers. These exchanges have highlighted not only possible gatekeepers’
shortcomings in meeting DMA requirements, but also the complex ripple effects
such solutions may have across various categories of actors within the ecosystem.
Moreover, participants have drawn attention to the intricate interactions between
DMA obligations and other regulatory frameworks, notably data protection and
security" - From here.

How Google forced publishers to accept AI scraping as price of appearing in search

 PressGazette, here.

Google’s bringing Gemini to your car with Android Auto

 TechCrunch, here

I was wondering whether the Bundeskartellamt proceeding covers Gemini for Android Auto at all. ("In Commitment 1 (“Interoperability with GAS”), Google undertakes to create and provide
the technical conditions to enable the Google Maps, Google Play and Google Assistant
services contained in GAS, collectively referred to as the “GAS Software Components”29,
to interoperate with voice assistants, map services and app stores of third-party suppliers
in IVI Systems in an equivalent way and to an equivalent extent as the GAS software
components interoperate with each other and that they are thus fully interoperable with
services of other suppliers. Google will make the necessary APIs, terms of service for the
use of the APIs and the documentation required for the implementation available to vehicle
manufacturers and their suppliers"

Scaling Innovation: The New Competition Tool could be handy

 



Verbraucherzentrale NRW beantragt einstweilige Verfügung gegen Meta

 Hier.

Republicans Aim To Enshrine Rental Price-Fixing

 The Lever, here

Good luck explaining this to Europeans.

*That* Adtech Virginia Decision

 States, here.

Google, here

Elon Musk’s apparent power play at the Copyright Office completely backfired

 The Verge, here

Monday, May 12, 2025

Lessons from the past: market power and democracy

 M. Snoep, here.

I agree with the article on almost every point, but I find the argument that market power can exist and be maintained without anti-competitive practices rather unconvincing, especially when applied to the DMA. In reality, such a notion is more of a legal fiction: either anti-competitive behaviour goes undetected, or – more troublingly – antitrust laws are not enforced, often due to a reluctance to act or the perception that enforcement is largely ineffective.

Meta: Nigeria’s users face a choice of either no rights or no services 

 


A19 et al., here.

(Disclosure: proudly consulted for A19 until Dec 2024 - until great Isa came back!).

Ruling here

Unpacking “America First Antitrust” for Europeans

 C. Caffarra, here.

[My take would be a bit different, of course]

THE RIGHT UNDERSTANDS THAT ALL GOVERNANCE IS DATA GOVERNANCE

 S. Viljoen, here

Chile's FNE v. Google (Android)

 Here

I guess that last week at the ICN this was a topic too. 

Amici to US v.Google (Search) - remedies

 
Amici - Spotting Judah 

Amici briefs, a selection:

AELP, here
Anthropic, here.
Apple, here.
Brave, here.
FTC, here.
NEWS/MEDIA ALLIANCE, here.
Y Combinator, here.

"Scholars", here.


U.S. presses for Google to share data by citing Yahoo Japan deal

 JapanTimes, here.

Certification of Business Practices and Algorithms as a Complementary Approach to Platform Regulation

 D. Lavie et al., here.

THE DEVELOPMENT OF GENERATIVE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FROM A COPYRIGHT PERSPECTIVE

 EUIPO, here.

What Abundance Lacks

 I. Weber, here.

Five Takeaways from the Copyright Office’s Controversial New AI Report

 Copyrightlately, here.

Cloudflare CEO: AI is killing the business model of the web

 


SearchEngine Land, here.

Platform Competition after Android Auto

 K. Stylianou, here.

My 2021 piece on the AGCM's decision  here. The original case was a bit richer than the current discussion - but lawyers, you know ;-) 

Friday, May 09, 2025

Pope Bob the Builder of a Better Digital Future? Law and math degrees


He also said that we are in the midst of a new revolution: during the time of Leo XIII, the Industrial Revolution was underway, while now the Digital Revolution is taking place."  here


Faire Bedingungen für Digitale Märkte: Die Rolle des Bundeskartellamts

 Data Agenda, hier.

Corporate influence in competition policymaking

 OECD, here.

What to do also about corporate influence in international organizations and networks active in competition policysteering? How does this fit within the very helpful Table 1? 

["Story two — an academic associated with an institute funded by several large technology firms signed an amicus brief opposing a country’s enforcement action. Later, without disclosing that fact, they gave a purportedly expert presentation at the OECD attacking that same enforcement action and advocating the OECD take a position favoring the institute’s funders" - J. Kanter, here
]

When I was still attending ICN conferences as a NGA, I was also personally struck by the army of corporate NGAs present. I wonder if this has changed since. 


Farewell to the US Open Banking that never was?

 Bloomberg, here.

Apple emergency motion (Epic v. Apple)

 Here

Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Fireside Chat Google Remedy

 Here

VSA framework on my mind - I received some great comments, working on a second version...

Microsoft wins FTC appeal challenging $69 billion Activision Blizzard deal

 Reuters, here

Here.

Apple Working to Move to AI Search in Browser Amid Google Fallout

 CNBC, here.

Interoperability and Openness Between Different Governance Models: The Dynamics of Mastodon/Threads and Wikipedia/Google

 Aline et al., here.

EP Annual report on Competition Policy - 2024

 Here.

They have set on a name: America First Antitrust

 



Can you be from Africa, Asia, or Europe, and be in favour of "America First Antitrust" - like there have always been those adhering to the Chicago, Post-Chicago School? Even Ordoliberalists, Neo-Schumpeterians, New Brandeisians could be from almost everywhere on the planet. This choice of conceptual isolationalism by the US antitrust enforcers is, well, unprecedented.

When on stage herself at the ICN, Gail Slater managed to make America First Antitrust more palatable to an international audience, also with some help from SC (first principles! Draghi Report! 2 of the 4Ps! You can apply it also to the ICN!). 




"Meta AI" bei Facebook, Instagram und WhatsApp – so widersprechen Sie

 

Verbraucherzentrale, hier.

Florida lawmaker proposes forcing Apple to allow third-party app stores like EU

9T05Mac, here

And Rep. Cammack herself here.


Computing Commons

 Ada Lovelace Institute, here and here.

The art of building moats in the AI age?

 

MLex, here


[Certified critical of the EU Google remedies since at least 2018]

Tuesday, May 06, 2025

Lessons from Microsoft

 P. Weiser, here.

The Conflict-of-Interest Discount in the Marketplace of Ideas

 J. Barrios et al., here.


How to fight Apple and (maybe) win, with Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney

 Podcast, here.

ICN 25 Edinburgh

 

[Friendly enforcers in sunny Edinburgh]   

Agenda, here. Livestream here.


[Disclosure: I'm a low key ICN NGA for the Italian Competition Authority]

 

 

 

Some running comments:

COFECE taking centre stage is interesting, and perhaps a subtle warning, given that the government has largely dismantled it.

The EU and everybody else taking cues from South Africa in revising its merger guidelines (broader policy goals)? 

Nobody talks about cartel enforcement any more, says Andreas Mundt. Nor of vertical restraints, if I can add. I'd resuscitate the whole area for more growth and innovation (a whole PhD on the latter). 

Enforcement of the German "New Competition Tool" - strategic decision in many ways, also rescuing it ;-). 

Looking at something else than competition? Mundt very sceptical...

The EU perspective, beyond Draghi: 
- Not much.

Coffee Break 

ACCC: my Q, where is the Final Report? Update: we heard "soon"


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

The importance of continous monitoring...

 

 

 


 


 #DMAlove

 

 

 

 

 


 The future...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We've being saying it for ages, of course.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Japan: Guidelines not public yet, in case you were asking.

Google first case: broad cease and desist order. How is it going, BTW? 

Google second case: restriction of search tech (commitment)

Ongoing: Amazon Marketplace

GenAI Market Study 

India:  

AI market study  

Digital Competition Bill: stakeholder comments currently analysed (heard from a contact it isn't going very well though) 

Meta case: express consent case (sounds also familiar - see also Nigeria) - cease and desist order; data protection there  not yet enforced; competition policy perspective. 

Two Google orders

Cases beyond GAFAM  

- Quick commerce: misusing access to data - predatory pricing (AI)? 

France:

Challenge, keeping up with AI. Is there still a race for size, etc.? Google: publishers rights, their data trained for AI. Conversion between search and AI agents? 

Dense forest of regulation, to be navigated also by CAs. Any red tape? 

Interaction between competition and data protection: Apple ATT (data protection "design" can be anticompetitive). Cooperation "promoted" by EU judges. 

OECD advertisement.

US Keynote (FTC):

Adam Smith, yes I was waiting for it!

Global Competition Initiative, yep. Wondering right now if due to EU's low key there is a space to fill...

Dynamic and pro-workers economy

Short party speech - that wouldn't normally fly that well here... (Sherman was a Republican Senator; Big Tech's censorship...). Quite significant right after Andreas Mundt's comments firmly against the politicization of antitrust.

Draghi's red tape credo supported, "regulatory capture is very real" 

Not a fan of the DMA: rigid criteria for designation; lacks finesse, lacks tailoring of remedies, excalating fines, extraterritorial effects. 

Just yesterday, Tim Sweeney was saying how US enforcers could now possibly criticise the EU for what it’s doing with the DMA when their own judges are siding with it – well, we’ve seen how [I guess the FTC Chair couldn't resist the temptation of emulating JD Vance in Munich].

GenAI: AI regulation isn't good, risk based yeah...

Final part of his speech is a vey good example of "innovation rhetoric" - I guess his Colleague Meador would have been more nuanced and useful.

 ---------

Entrenchement theories of harm in merger control: Nothing that you as WavesBlog Reader don't know already.

Google/FitBit, Google/DoubleClick/; Booking/eTraveli - strengthening core position of power, you name it.

"Clear limiting principles"
- relevance of the assets for the core market;
- qualitative effects, dynamic effects;
- protecting the little competition there is left.

--------------

Unilateral Conduct Plenary

Perhaps slides would be helpful – the intro remarks listing cases are almost impossible to follow (I'm a sinner too, my Students complain).

Sweden wishes for 102 Draft Guidelines- very well advanced, says Prof. Fox. 

Now, Prof. Fox stirring up things asking the right question: Is your jurisdiction's unilateral conduct law fit for the purpose in digital? I voted no, of course. Sweden mentioning also the possibility of a NCT at the EU level and in Sweden. 

Japan: introduced ex-ante regulation to identify very specific market problems. 

Spain: yes if applied flexibly and in a speedy manner. 

Mentioning Android Auto as an example of a Court taking into consideration incentives to innovate: Hallelujah. 

[I wonder whether this Conference format shouldn't be changed a bit, 23 y. after Naples - but I'm sure the ones watching online miss all the interesting bits]. 

_--------

DAY TWO

Cartel

Nice to hear from Chile - the star of competition authorities in South America, I heard. The Casino Operators case is worth a movie!  Already on my syllabus.

Interesting approch by NZ: spotting industries prone to cartels and establishing "relationships".

Spotted TikTok videos by CAs? Handy for teaching too...Leniency applicants saw seem to watch them too.


UK Cartelist? Banned from public procurement for 5 y. unless you apply for leniency. Adam Smith would be impressed!

Chile: algorithmic collusion? No too much (enforcer's) of a problem. 



Teresa Ribera

I've seen many competition commissioners already: she's an impressive quick learner...

Merger guidelines, get your submissions ready!

"Culture of compliance" in digital, still a bit of work to do ("adaptation"). 

Replying to the FTC Chair: you go after gatekeepers your way (ex post)  we do it our way (ex post, ex ante). But happy to cooperate! "Mutual respect." 

Short and sweet...

Talking about food, an NGA from COMESA kicking it off magnificently 

Not able to follow it live, sadly.

Listening to it on the go. Much impressed by ACCC intervention to allow for ALDI's and other discounters market entry. 

"Nachfragemacht" of retailers is an evergreen topic, I think the EU tried it all (regulation, mostly). ACCC mentioned APIs for price comparisons. Un-conflicted AI-agents? Not living in the desert, I know exactly where the vegetables I eat come from. Small farmers  deserve admiration and protection. Great project.

Do competition authorities need more tools?

Nigeria deserves a shoutout, indeed. I think the ICN should be vocal in supporting members when attacked by Big Something. I hope next Steer will be a bit more muscular ans proactive in this respect (modest suggestion as a distant NGA).

Hong Kong Fish Market dawn raid: 180 people! Also worth a movie.

--------

DAY THREE

While waiting for it to start, what can we reasonably expect from this interview with Gail Slater? From their perspective, enforcement is what matters - apparently. Will she mention ex-ante as complementary to ex-post, to an extent? Rather unlikely but happy to be wrong. Perhaps a kind word on international cooperation? How will she translate her America First Antitrust for an international audience?

Trial team, DOJ Google Search: 30 witnesses for the DOJ, 6 months of discovery, 40 depositions for 40 days. 

Stimulate economic growth, innovation. At the macro level, energy, fiscal policy, taxation, deregulation. (Anticompetitive regulation in the marketplace). 

Trump merger review: very popular mandate - America first. Speeding up merger process (39 early terminations since March); open to settlements (Kanter wasn't). 

Trump digital cases: focus on Big Tech; Google cases, not partisan; Google Search DOJ Team: sounds happy; unfreezing the search market by scale and data. Adtech: remarkable judge. Two remedy cases at some point might converge - against size and data, but also behavioural measures. The whole world is watching, Sarah says.

America First Antitrust:

- first principles standpoint

-- tyranny.gov and .com (roots of the country)

-- textualism, precedent, but also modern economics (?)

-- anticompetitive regulation.

Foundational principles of the ICN...

International cooperation: get in touch, you can even call me mum, younger Delegates! 

Off now 👋
























 

 

 



 


 

 

 


 


 

 

 

 

 





 

When Big Tech Goes to Court: What Google and Meta’s Legal Battles Mean for Global Platform Governance

 DAIDAC, here.

𝗔𝗻𝘁𝗶𝘁𝗿𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗶𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗗𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗿𝗮𝗹𝗶𝘇𝗲𝗱 𝗘𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗼𝗺𝘆

 

 

Looking forward to reading it!

Many years ago, when Rob Nicholls stayed at my university for a few months, we published "Decentralised Digital Ecosystems and Competition Law: A Conceptual Framework" - fascinating topic...


Market Power and Gatekeepers: Complements or Substitutes?

 F. Thépot, here

No excuse: "A barely-known commission floors another tech giant, Meta Platforms; parent company of WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram"

The Nation, here.

US seeks forced sale of Google advertising technology products

 Bloomberg, here.

The Adoption of Artificial Intelligence in Firms

 OECD & Co., here.

Google AdTech Case: Remedies Proposed by the DOJ

 Here

Goggle's proposal here

2021 EU case still "progressing"? 

April 2025 US ruling 

Wait, Google lies?

Antitrust enforcement should protect the conditions that allow innovation to thrive (and much more)


M. Meador, here

[Pretty aligned with what we wrote, actually - but devil in the details, of course; also at the heart of the VSA framework I proposed].

FTC v. Meta Trial Exhibits

 Here.

Monday, May 05, 2025

The need to incentivize experimentation on top of platforms

 Stratechery, here

The many ways special interests have captured academic research (in medicine)

 J. Ioannides, here

HOW EU PLATFORM REGULATION CAN SURVIVE TRUMP 2.0

 CERRE, here

Public consultation on pay or okay

 Italian DPA, here.

EFFICIENCIES IN MERGER CONTROL

 OECD, here.

Naming the current US Antitrust Moment/Movement? New Jerichans? 😉

At the start of what is now known as the Biden antitrust era, its leading voices called themselves New Brandeisians. I analysed their manifesto, enforcement practice followed. Their legacy is now beginning to be assessed.

Today, under Trump II, a different approach is taking shape. It is certainly conservative, but not libertarian. Methodologically cautious, rhetorically nationalist and populist, ambitious—but we don’t yet know how much it'll be transactional (aka KMA antitrust). 

Is it time to give it a name? The Ultimate/True/Neo/Etc. Conservatives?

Update: Perhaps we need a more religious name. As ""Peter Thiel is now running Bible study groups in Silicon Valley. He said in a few interviews recently that he believes that the Antichrist is Greta Thunberg," it's perhaps significant that the FTC Chair recently argued out of the blue that "The FTC should not take orders from Greta Thunberg."

 

UPDATE They have set on a name: America First Antitrust  



Nicolas Petit: Goals of Competition Law

 Chez Oles, video here.

ACCC Digital platform services inquiry 2020-25 final report

 Any news? It [was] due to be provided to the Australian Government by 31 March 2025. Soon, post-elections?

Again: The EC was there first


Back in the day, this would’ve been a badge of honour. Not now, mind you — we daren’t draw too much attention. Still, with the DOJ (here) and FTC (here) presently banging on about a strong antitrust agenda, those worries could soon be yesterday’s news.

BTW, if the goal is adaptation (gatekeeper compliance is one aspect of it), broadcasting the results of enforcement to the market is essential.



Sunday, May 04, 2025

Friday, May 02, 2025

Antitrust Policy for the Conservative


  M. Meador, here.










Very good read!

Quick take and help to my fading memory - from  here.  I particularly liked to read his thoughts on innovation (more from recent work here and here)



Antitrust Policy for the Conservative 🤔 www.ftc.gov/system/files...

"values is a deep aversion to concentrated power and its potential for the corruption of justice and encouragement of vice" yes, you read correctly, vice - like willful non compliance of court orders?

But to brand the New Brandeisians as mere structuralists is, well, misguided.

"In our time, the idea that antitrust law is essential to preserving democracy predominantly is associated with the left and the progressive movement...the fact is that such a concern has a long pedigree on the right as well"

"...interpreting and applying the antitrust laws ...with an understanding of consumer welfare that actually focuses on consumers and an approach to legal and factual antitrust analyses that prioritizes avoiding false negatives over false positives"

"Preventing monopolies and concentrated corporate power, protecting small businesses, and shielding democracy from the influence of big business are all valid and conservative goals"

Even worse, "Bork's version of consumer welfare...implicitly requires deference to economists in how we decide legal questions"

"Conservatives should...advocate for legal and factual antitrust analyses that are less deferential to claimed efficiencies and defenses of mergers and anticompetitive conduct" in the EU, we're about to do exactly the contrary, in the name of "progress" - not joking.

Simonetta Vezzoso
‪@wavesblog.bsky.social‬
"The right has too often fetishized economic analysis, as if economic experts in ivory towers can better manage the economy than economic experts in regulatory agencies" but are the latter still economists, just less theoretically inclined?
May 2, 2025 at 5:07 PM

Economics "is not a scientific tool; it is a tool of educated guesswork, one that depends upon various assumptions and caveats, all of which can and often is rendered moot by marketplace realities and “facts on the ground"" - if it's about ditching abstruse IO models, couldn't agree more 😊 of course
BIG BUT, fn 105 "Making antitrust law subservient to “the economics” is no different than making your COVID-19 policy subservient to “the science.” The pandemic gave us the painful reminder that rule by expert is arbitrary, capricious, and often erroneous" rather, no IO fetishism - look beyond it

"Soviet housing projects were “efficient.” But the conservative pursues beauty, excellence, and virtue, not mere efficiency" 😂

"The idea that we should tolerate greater market power within markets because it fosters greater innovation to disrupt that market gets things entirely backwards"

His economic take on innovation (yes he does, forget IO) is ☑️ : "Far from the “perennial gale of creative destruction,” this looks more like the “perennial lull” that Schumpeter warned against"

"Monopoly power in the legacy market can empower a firm to control the quantity and quality of innovation in emerging markets"

"an undue preoccupation with innovation—such as innovation at any cost, or so-called “permissionless innovation”—is a progressive impulse, not a conservative one" no, it's just nonsense.

"Antitrust law is not a panacea, but it is incredibly important. It is the only comprehensive area of law that governs how we structure our economy and protects the free market, and it concerns the greatest loci of power in our country outside the federal government"

"Further discussion and experience will undoubtedly lead to others, and it is my hope that a new generation of scholars, practitioners, and leaders will be inspired to take up the challenge"