One of the Biden administration’s most significant impacts on U.S. technology and innovation has been its aggressive shift in antitrust enforcement, with Big Tech companies its most prominent target.
Antitrust enforcement is likely to return to its established norms, Jay Ezrielev writes in a guest commentary.
Launched in 2016, Facebook Marketplace enables users of Meta’s flagship social network to buy and sell goods. The European ...
In response to the state legislature’s 2022 directive for the California Law Revision Commission (CLRC or Commission) to study potential reforms ...
A federal court in Washington, D.C., has ruled that the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) antitrust lawsuit against Meta must proceed. The lawsuit alleges that Meta has monopolized the social media ...
JetBlue isn't pulling out of Los Angeles or ceasing to serve corporate clients. And it even plans one or two new routes to ...
Four states and the Justice Department argued against consolidation of two leading health care companies, citing patient care ...
Lina Khan’s controversial tenure as Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair seems at an end with President-elect Trump’s win ...
The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones have hired Edith Hancock to cover antitrust and competition issues in the European ...
PE firms globally expect increased scrutiny from antitrust, FDI and other regulatory authorities to have a negative impact on their ...
When Donald Trump is inaugurated as president for the second time in January 2025, he will assume power over the regulation ...
The election will undoubtedly have a significant impact on the direction of efforts to regulate companies' collection, protection, and sale of consumer data.