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Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets (Hardback)
$209.48 - Save $21.08 (9%) - RRP $230.56 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Competition Law and Regulation of Technology MarketsThe book considers how EU Competition rules interact with regulation, intellectual property law and data protection rules, making extensive reference to US developments. The book analyses the application of competition rules in communications networks, industrial IP, creative IP, and electronic commerce and services.
Full description- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Published: 26 May 2011
- Format: Hardback 448 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Linguistics | Hi-tech Manufacturing Industries | Competition Law / Antitrust Law | Intellectual Property Law
- ISBN 13: 9780199575213 ISBN 10: 0199575215
- Sales rank: 735,337
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Full description for Competition Law and Regulation of Technology Markets
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 books 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 book is also suitable for advanced degree courses in communications and technology law.

