How the legal profession became Wall Street’s helpmeet
It’s time for the Democratic leader to step aside.
OMI believes the DOJ’s action should serve as a first step towards restoring the open, democratic, highly distributed media structure that existed in the United States through most of the 20th Century.
Read MorePhil Longman reports in the Washington Monthly about how the real healthcare crisis involves monopolies.
Senator Al Franken gives a keynote speech in a 3 part panel discussion about the power of Big Tech, net neutrality, monopoly, and our democracy
Read MoreRussian exploitation of Facebook’s monopoly structure to undermine America’s democracy means the FTC must act swiftly to curb its power.
Read MoreIn the 1970s, a new wave of post-Watergate liberals stopped fighting monopoly power. The result is an increasingly dangerous political system.
Read MoreCan users of what is essentially privatized social infrastructure really log off?
Read MoreOpen Markets Food & Power reporter Leah Douglas reviews Philip Howard's "Concentration and Power in the Food System" in the Washington Monthly. His slim book which poses a simple question: who controls what we eat? Four companies decide what meat you eat, two choose what milk you buy, and soon only one will determine what beer you drink. Are we all fine with that?
Read MoreGoogle's proposed remedy of the European Commission's demand falls far short of what is necessary to address Google’s abuse of its dominant position in search.
Read MoreThe Open Markets Institute applauds the Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) for recognizing that America has a monopoly problem and driving forward the conversation about how to address it.
Read MoreThe credit reporting debate we should be having.
Read MoreTen old/new ideas to give power back to the people.
Read MoreOpen Markets congratulates European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager and the European competition authority for this important decision requiring that Google give equal treatment to rival services instead of privileging its own.
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