K. Sabeel Rahman, the president of Demos, joined Open Markets Institute researcher Udit Thakur to talk about the pitfalls of managerialism in policy-making, and what a truly democratic think-tank ecosystem might look like.
Read MoreThe Open Markets Institute is very proud to announce the creation of a new, 12-member academic advisory board to help guide and advise Open Markets’ research and policy work.
Read MoreThe New York Times' Jack Nicas and Daisuke Wakabayashi report that home-speaker maker Sonos said Google and Amazon stole its technology and abused their power, but it could only risk suing one. "The fear of retaliation is a real fear. Any of these companies could bury them tomorrow. Google could bury them in their search results. Amazon can bury them in their search results,” Sally Hubbard told them.
Read MoreVoice of America’s Michelle Quinn reports that the “era of Silicon Valley’s operating largely free from government may be coming to an end.”
Read MoreThe New York Times' Steve Lohr, who has covered the tech industry for more than two decades, explains how we may be entering a progressive era of antitrust. He speaks with Open Markets Executive Director Barry Lynn on the changing political landscape. “The environment is radically different than it was even a year or two ago,” Lynn told him. “It’s a grass-roots rebellion against concentrated power.”
Read MoreA reporter who has covered the tech industry for more than two decades explains how we may be entering a progressive era of antitrust.
Read MoreIn response to a report by The New York Times that U.S. Department of Justice Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Makan Delrahim substantively helped T-Mobile and Sprint merge, Open Markets Director of Enforcement Strategy Sally Hubbard makes the following statement.
Read MoreThe Open Markets Institute Team wishes you a happy holiday season! We know a lot of you will be taking advantage of these quiet cold days to catch up on your reading. Obviously, we hope this will include some time with Goliath: The 100-Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy. Our team is proud to have supported this important new history of how Americans debated economics in the 20th Century. But many other works also inspired us over the last year, and we hope you’ll have the time to read a few of them.
Read MoreOpen Markets Institute filed an amicus brief in support of theFederal Trade Commission in its case against Impax Laboratories. In our brief, we argue that pay-for-delay agreements are a form of per se illegal, horizontal market allocation agreements that seek to prohibit market entry and thus harm market competition.
Read MoreWelcome to The Corner. In this issue, we discuss Impax Laboratories v. FTC and our latest amicus brief that we submitted in support of the FTC. We hope that all our readers have a happy and safe holiday. The Corner will return on January 9.
Read MoreThe Farm System Reform Act would halt construction of new concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) and phase out all large CAFOs by 2040, while also holding corporate meatpackers more accountable for environmental degradation and farmer exploitation.
Read MoreToday, the Open Markets Institute filed an amicus curiae brief in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in its suit against generic drug maker Impax Laboratories.
Read More“Open Markets has long called for reinvigorating the Packers & Stockyards Act," said Open Markets Institute's Food & Power Reporter Claire Kelloway. "This is a transformative step in challenging Big Ag’s monopoly power.”
Read MoreOn December 16, 2019, Open Markets Institute filed an amicus curiae brief in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in its suit against generic drug maker Impax Laboratories.
Read MoreThe New York Times' Natasha Singer "reviews the week’s news, offering analysis about the most important developments in the tech industry." She cites Open Markets' Researcher and Reporter Matthew Buck's piece on the Washington Monthly, which argues that Amazon, Google and Facebook should stay out of health care, among "Stories You Shouldn't Miss."
Read MoreThe Washington Post's Tony Romm reports that regulators probing Facebook for violations of antitrust law have considered seeking a preliminary injunction against the company, aiming to halt the tech giant’s plans to integrate its social-networking app with the other services it owns. “At a time when Facebook is under scrutiny for its monopoly power and its abuses of its power, to say it’s going to integrate these three platforms is just another monopoly grab,” Open Markets Director of Enforcement Strategy Sally Hubbard told him.
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