Shortly before the Second Intermational Harvard Conference on Internet & Society, the Department of Justice ( DOJ ) brought a widely publicized suit against the Microsoft Corporation. In its complaint, the DOJ charged Microsoft with engaging in a variety of antitrust wrongs connected with its alleged monopoly position in the market for personal computer ( PC ) operating system software. The Conference panel on Antitrust and the Internet, which had planned to focus on how antitrust law affects standard-setting efforts and the implications for the Intermet, quickly abandoned that topic in favor of discussion of the Microsoft suit
In September 2007, the European Court of First Instance (CFI) ruled that Microsoft violated the Euro...
RAPID developments in the software industry underlie both the Gov ernment\u27s antitrust proceedings...
Andrew Gavil and Harry First’s book on the Department of Justice’s litigation against Microsoft will...
Shortly before the Second Intermational Harvard Conference on Internet & Society, the Department of ...
By traditional business standards, Microsoft looked like an ideal target for investigation by the De...
Some very significant developments in antitrust law have occurred in the last decade. Many have invo...
Not since the 1911 breakup of the Standard Oil trust has a government antitrust case attracted as mu...
[[abstract]]Antitrust challenges against Microsoft, the world’s largest software company, have raise...
As patent, copyright, and other intellectual property rights have assumed greater economic importanc...
On April 3, 2000, U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson declared that the Microsoft Corporatio...
The Microsoft antitrust case focused public attention on the role of antitrust enforcement in preser...
In a recent symposium issue of the George Mason Law Review, Steven Salop and R. Craig Romaine use th...
Microsoft Corporation\u27s jousting with the Justice Department\u27s Antitrust Division over the las...
The Antitrust Division’s Microsoft case and the Federal Trade Commission’s Intel case both rested on...
W hile most antitrust cases proceed in obscurity, the case brought againstMicrosoft by federal and s...
In September 2007, the European Court of First Instance (CFI) ruled that Microsoft violated the Euro...
RAPID developments in the software industry underlie both the Gov ernment\u27s antitrust proceedings...
Andrew Gavil and Harry First’s book on the Department of Justice’s litigation against Microsoft will...
Shortly before the Second Intermational Harvard Conference on Internet & Society, the Department of ...
By traditional business standards, Microsoft looked like an ideal target for investigation by the De...
Some very significant developments in antitrust law have occurred in the last decade. Many have invo...
Not since the 1911 breakup of the Standard Oil trust has a government antitrust case attracted as mu...
[[abstract]]Antitrust challenges against Microsoft, the world’s largest software company, have raise...
As patent, copyright, and other intellectual property rights have assumed greater economic importanc...
On April 3, 2000, U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson declared that the Microsoft Corporatio...
The Microsoft antitrust case focused public attention on the role of antitrust enforcement in preser...
In a recent symposium issue of the George Mason Law Review, Steven Salop and R. Craig Romaine use th...
Microsoft Corporation\u27s jousting with the Justice Department\u27s Antitrust Division over the las...
The Antitrust Division’s Microsoft case and the Federal Trade Commission’s Intel case both rested on...
W hile most antitrust cases proceed in obscurity, the case brought againstMicrosoft by federal and s...
In September 2007, the European Court of First Instance (CFI) ruled that Microsoft violated the Euro...
RAPID developments in the software industry underlie both the Gov ernment\u27s antitrust proceedings...
Andrew Gavil and Harry First’s book on the Department of Justice’s litigation against Microsoft will...