Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets: first endorsement

Professor Eleanor Fox of NYU has provided an endorsement of my book. The endorsement will filter through to the online bookshops in time: This is an excellent treatise on EU and US competition law, intellectual property law, and regulation as applied to technology, information, communication networks and media. Through the technology lens, the book engages with the cutting edge of the law and thus is able to explain the applicable legal principles, and the critical US/EU divergences, clearly and insightfully. The book promises to be invaluable to practitioners, enforcers and students alike. Professor Eleanor M. Fox, Walter J. Derenberg Professor of Trade Regulation, New York University School of...

Margin squeeze in telecoms: the TeliaSonera ruling, indispensability, reliance or…?

A margin squeeze occurs if the difference between the retail prices charged by a dominant company and the wholesale prices it charges its competitors for comparable products is negative, or insufficient to cover the costs to the dominant company of providing its own retail products on the downstream market. These issues are discussed in Chapter Four of Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets. Since the book went to press, the Court of Justice has given a preliminary ruling in the TeliaSonera case (Case C-52/09, Judgment of the Court (First Chamber) of 17 February 2011, Konkurrensverket v TeliaSonera Sverige AB, ECR reports 2011 Page 00000), and the European Commission has issued a prohibition decision against Telekomunikacja Polska, the Polish telecoms operator, fining it € 127 million for a margin squeeze. (Press release here.) Case C-52/09 TeliaSonera TeliaSonera is the Swedish fixed telephone network operator, owning the local telecoms infrastructure – the local loop. TeliaSonera offered its retail competitors unbundled access to the local loop in line with its obligations under Regulation (EC) No 2887/2000 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2000 on unbundled access to the local loop (OJ 2000 L 336, p. 4). It also offered an ADSL product intended for wholesale users, enabling those operators to supply retail broadband services to end users, but it did so voluntarily, without regulatory obligation. At the same time, TeliaSonera offered retail broadband connection services directly to end users, in competition with the companies to whom it supplied wholesale services. Further to national court proceedings alleging a margin squeeze, the court referred the following questions to...

Competition law and regulation book: publicity blurb

Here’s the latest draft of the publicity material for my comparative law book on EU and US Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets. •  The first practitioner work to give full comparative examination to EU and US competition law and regulation within the information, communication and media markets • Unique analysis of the relationship between EU/US competition law, intellectual property, telecoms regulation and data protection • With dedicated chapters on pricing, product design, standards and interoperability, communications networks and data protection. • Outlook sections which look at possible future developments and law reform • Written by an official in the Directorate General for Competition in the European Commission with prior in-house experience at a global communications firm Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets takes a practical, integrated approach to EU and US competition law and regulation in the  technology sector – including major trans-Atlantic cases such as Microsoft, Google/Doubleclick, and Intel, and important comparative issues such as refusal to supply (Microsoft, Trinko), margin squeeze (Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica, EU Guidance Paper, Linkline), communications regulation and data protection. The book’s unique perspective focuses on the information, communication and media markets, that form the ‘new economy’. It provides a coherent analysis of these various markets by considering the regulatory context, and by addressing the issues, and ensuing legal problems, that are common to them. These include; high fixed costs, the importance of intellectual property and standards, the impact of interoperability, and the prevalence of network effects. This book is indispensable for competition lawyers in private practice or in-house at technology companies, and for practitioners specialised in these sectors.   The...

Contents of Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets

Here’s the table of contents for the new book. Each chapter is mostly focused on EU law, but also has a US comparative section. 1. Introduction 2. Objectives of Competition Law and Regulation 3. Introduction to Competition Law 4. Competition Law and Pricing 5. Intellectual Property 6. Competition Law, Standards and Interoperability 7. Product Design and Innovation 8. Networks and Network Neutrality 9, Data, Data Protection and Competition Law Amazon links: UK US France...

Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets

The blogging hiatus has been caused partly by my return to the European Commission, and partly by the need to finish my new book, Competition Law and Regulation of Technology markets, published by Oxford University Press. The intended audience is practitioners, academics and in-house counsel with an interest in communications and high tech issues, in particular those that need to understand how these issues are handled in both the EU and the US. There are always unintended consequences of course, and I’m extremely pleased that the book has already been recommended on at least one LLM course in communications law. The book is mostly about antitrust in the communications sector, but also covers intellectual property, telecoms regulation and data protection. Its main focus is EU law, but includes substantial analysis of US law as well, highlighting similarities and differences. The book is now available, from all good (niche, specialised) bookstores, and also from the slightly less niche bookseller Amazon: UK US France Germany Happy...