In Ohio v. American Express Co., the Supreme Court applied antitrust’s rule of reason to a two-sided platform. The challenge was to an “anti-steering” rule, a vertical restraint preventing merchants from shifting customers who offered an AmEx card from to a less costly alternative such as Visa or Mastercard. A two-sided platform is a business that depends on relationships between two different, noncompeting groups of transaction partners. For example, a printed periodical such as a newspaper earns revenue by selling both advertising and subscriptions to the paper itself. Success depends on a platform’s ability to maintain the appropriate balance between participation on one side and the other. For example, if Uber, a two-sided platform offe...
In traditional markets, firms can charge prices that are significantly elevated relative to their co...
Multisided platforms are ubiquitous in today\u27s economy. Although newspapers demonstrate that the ...
I. Introduction II. A Brief History of a Long Litigation ... A. The District Court Rules for Plainti...
This Article considers how antitrust’s rule of reason should be applied to an exclusionary practice ...
This paper makes two points. First, it describes the opinion as creating a mirror-image of the per ...
Two-sided platforms serve two sets of customers and enable them to interact with each other. The fiv...
In recent years, the federal courts’ analysis of the competitive effects of conduct challenged under...
This paper makes two points. First, it describes the opinion as creating a mirror-image of the per ...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the United States Supreme Court had its first knowing encounter wit...
In Ohio v. American Express Co. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that in the case of transaction platfor...
Now that the immediate fallout from the Supreme Court’s blockbuster Amex decision has cooled, this A...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the United States Supreme Court had its first knowing encounter wit...
Everything about Ohio v. American Express was wrong and the adoption of “two-sided platform” reasoni...
In traditional markets, firms can charge prices that are significantly elevated relative to their co...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the Supreme Court applied antitrust’s rule of reason to a two-sided...
In traditional markets, firms can charge prices that are significantly elevated relative to their co...
Multisided platforms are ubiquitous in today\u27s economy. Although newspapers demonstrate that the ...
I. Introduction II. A Brief History of a Long Litigation ... A. The District Court Rules for Plainti...
This Article considers how antitrust’s rule of reason should be applied to an exclusionary practice ...
This paper makes two points. First, it describes the opinion as creating a mirror-image of the per ...
Two-sided platforms serve two sets of customers and enable them to interact with each other. The fiv...
In recent years, the federal courts’ analysis of the competitive effects of conduct challenged under...
This paper makes two points. First, it describes the opinion as creating a mirror-image of the per ...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the United States Supreme Court had its first knowing encounter wit...
In Ohio v. American Express Co. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that in the case of transaction platfor...
Now that the immediate fallout from the Supreme Court’s blockbuster Amex decision has cooled, this A...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the United States Supreme Court had its first knowing encounter wit...
Everything about Ohio v. American Express was wrong and the adoption of “two-sided platform” reasoni...
In traditional markets, firms can charge prices that are significantly elevated relative to their co...
In Ohio v. American Express Co., the Supreme Court applied antitrust’s rule of reason to a two-sided...
In traditional markets, firms can charge prices that are significantly elevated relative to their co...
Multisided platforms are ubiquitous in today\u27s economy. Although newspapers demonstrate that the ...
I. Introduction II. A Brief History of a Long Litigation ... A. The District Court Rules for Plainti...