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Competition on the Internet electronic resource edited by Gintarė Surblytė.

Contributor(s): Surblytė, Gintarė [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: MPI Studies on Intellectual Property and Competition LawPublication details: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2015Description: IX, 108 p. 1 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783642550966Subject(s): law | Management | Industrial management | computers | Law and legislation | E-commerce | International law | Intellectual property -- Law and legislation | Law | International IT and Media Law, Intellectual Property Law | Legal Aspects of Computing | Innovation/Technology Management | e-Commerce/e-businessDDC classification: 343.099 LOC classification: K4240-4343K1401-1578.25Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introductory remarks by Gintarė Surblytė -- Selective Distribution and the Internet – Lessons from Case C-439/09 Pierre Fabre Dermo-Cosmétique (13 October 2011)by Stefan Enchelmaier -- Internet Competition and E-books: Challenging the Competition Policy Acquis? by Simonetta Vezzoso -- A Note on Price Parity Clauses in Platform Markets by Sebastian Wismer -- FTC v. Google: The Enforcement of Antitrust Law in Online Markets by Ronny Hauck -- A Legal Framework for the Assessment of Discriminatory Behaviour in the ICT Sector by Pablo Ibáñez Colomo -- Competition Concerns in Multi-sided Markets in Mobile Communication by Severin Frank -- The more technological approach – Competition law in the digital economy by Rupprecht Podszun.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Undeniably widespread and powerful as it is, the Internet is not beyond control: it can reach as high as the sky (cloud computing), but it cannot escape competition. Yet, protecting competition in the “network of networks” is not without challenges: not only are competitive processes in platform-based industries complex, so is competition law analysis. The latter is often confronted with the difficulties in predicting the outcome of competition, in particular in terms of innovation. Do the specific competition law issues in a digital environment presuppose a reconsideration of competition law concepts and their application? Can current competition law tools be adjusted to the rush pace of dynamic industries? To what extent could and should competition law be supplemented by regulation? This book provides an analysis of recent developments in the most relevant competition law cases in a digital environment on both sides of the Atlantic (the EU and the US) and assesses platform competition issues from a legal as well as an economic point of view.
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Introductory remarks by Gintarė Surblytė -- Selective Distribution and the Internet – Lessons from Case C-439/09 Pierre Fabre Dermo-Cosmétique (13 October 2011)by Stefan Enchelmaier -- Internet Competition and E-books: Challenging the Competition Policy Acquis? by Simonetta Vezzoso -- A Note on Price Parity Clauses in Platform Markets by Sebastian Wismer -- FTC v. Google: The Enforcement of Antitrust Law in Online Markets by Ronny Hauck -- A Legal Framework for the Assessment of Discriminatory Behaviour in the ICT Sector by Pablo Ibáñez Colomo -- Competition Concerns in Multi-sided Markets in Mobile Communication by Severin Frank -- The more technological approach – Competition law in the digital economy by Rupprecht Podszun.

Undeniably widespread and powerful as it is, the Internet is not beyond control: it can reach as high as the sky (cloud computing), but it cannot escape competition. Yet, protecting competition in the “network of networks” is not without challenges: not only are competitive processes in platform-based industries complex, so is competition law analysis. The latter is often confronted with the difficulties in predicting the outcome of competition, in particular in terms of innovation. Do the specific competition law issues in a digital environment presuppose a reconsideration of competition law concepts and their application? Can current competition law tools be adjusted to the rush pace of dynamic industries? To what extent could and should competition law be supplemented by regulation? This book provides an analysis of recent developments in the most relevant competition law cases in a digital environment on both sides of the Atlantic (the EU and the US) and assesses platform competition issues from a legal as well as an economic point of view.

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