Chillin'Competition

Relaxing whilst doing Competition Law is not an Oxymoron

Archive for March 2012

Yet another (good) antitrust quiz

with one comment

Antitrust quizzes seem to be the flavor of the day.

In the past few weeks we posted a few on this blog (see here, here, and here). Today we have just learnt that the European Commission has launched its own competition law quiz: http://ec.europa.eu/competition/consumers/quiz/index_en.html

Nice initiative from the Commission! (many thanks to our friend Isabel Yglesias for pointing us to it)

It’s actually quite well done. It has 3 levels: “Basic (general audience); Advanced (students in competition law); Expert (advanced students in competition law and practitioners)” (as if all practitioners had expert knowledge…).

We would love to arrange a competition among our readers to see how many of you get 10/10, but we have no way of verifyng any results you would report, and since most of you are also lawyers we can’t just trust you..

–   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –   –

P.S. We can’t give you more details for the moment, but you should know that a sort of competition law quiz will be an important part of the competition law conference of the century, decade, year, month? the first Chillin’ Competition conference.

The program is now half baked, and we will soon start contacting the speakers/participants we have in mind. We will be giving you further information in the coming days.

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

6 March 2012 at 5:12 pm

Posted in Polls and quizzes

Yet another well-timed complaint against Google

with one comment

It has been reported by Reuters that Microsoft and other companies are behind a new complaint against Google before the European Commission. Microsoft has denied having lodged any formal complaint. Regardless of whether Microsoft is involved or not, the news raises some thoughts:

Timing:

Once again, this complaint seems to have been strategically timed. Rumor had it that the European Commission would be adopting a preliminary position on the ongoing investigation by mid-March. No matter the merits of the complaint, whoever is behind it deserves credit for outstanding timing; they know how to play the game.

It reminds me of a well-known scene of my favorite movie saga, when in The Godfather III (yes, my taste for movies is absolutely mainstream) Al Pacino screams “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!” (doesn’t he look a bit like Sarkozy in the pic above?) (it also brings to mind the “Yet another on-time flight from Ryanair” pre-recorded phrase that follows that “sweet” melody that you get when you land..).

In our previous posts on this pending case we have always highlighted the good timing of complainants (see here). Also, last April Nicolas wrote here that the “chief, and maybe sole merit [of Microsoft`s complaint] is to throw some mud at Google in the press, at a moment when (i) Google has been reported to be close to a settlement with the Commission; and (ii) Google has suffered a major setback last week, when its settlement with US publishers and authors was annulled by a NY judge” (this opinion by Nicolas was also reported in the press).This time, the complaint not only comes a few days before the Commission is expected either to drop the case or send an Statement of Objections. It also comes a few days after Microsoft lodged another complaint against Motorola (only a week after the Commission and the DOJ gave green light to its acquisition by Google). Per Hellstrom and his unit must be swamped with so many complaints being brought in relation to IT markets.

Substance:

The new complaint apparently focuses on a new function recently introduced by Google (“Search, Plus Your World”) that integrates information (photos, news and comments) from Google’s social network (Google+) within Google’s search results. Those opposing the new function apparently claim that it constitutes anticompetitive tying on the part of Google. This would be intended to reinforce allegations that Google uses its search engine to promote its own services.

According to the Commission’s initial Press Release, the alleged conduct subject to investigation is “unfavourable treatment of [other search service providers’] services in Google’s unpaid and sponsored search results coupled with an alleged preferential placement of Google’s own services” . Following the initiation of the investigation by the Commission there have been various attempts at enlarging its scope.

In the past both Nicolas and myself have been very critical with the allegations against Google (we have no direct/indirect involvement whatsoever in the case and only comment on info that is in the public domain, so we may lack relevant information). For our previous comments on this case, see here, here, here and here; see also here for a guest post by Pablo Ibañez Colomo on this same issue. We understand that the Commission had no choice but to investigate it thoroughly, given that an eventual rejection of the complaints would with all certainty be challenged in Court. Nonetheless, we are concerned that a case against Google would imply either a significant lowering of standards of intervention or the acceptance of the theory of “Karate Competition Law“.

I’m not aware of any evidence pointing out to the fact that Google does or doesn’t discriminate, but let’s move away from the facts, let’s leave aside important issues such as the question of whether Google is dominant and the ease of switching to competing services, and let’s focus on a matter of legal principle: can we require absolute neutrality from a company, even if it is dominant?

The mere term “discrimination” carries extremely negative connotations (if you look at is as “differentiation” it sort of looks a bit more acceptable). It also implies some sense of inherent unfairness. Nonetheless, there is a significant difference between what is unfair and what is questionable under the antitrust rules. Many things in life are unfair, but I can’t complain saying that they’re illegal; or can I?

As we have both written in previous posts, discrimination does only run afoul of the antitrust rules provided that it gives rise to foreclosure (i.e. elimination of competition) (as with most antitrust debates, the best way to find a solution is often to go back to basics). Foreclosure is is the usual standard of intervention and we see no compelling reason for abandoning it in this particular case. Let’s apply this criterion to the reported new complaint: is the fact that information from Google+ will appear in the results enough to eliminate competition from, let’s say, Facebook? It seems like a very long shot.

Given the above, and in light of the limited information at our disposal, we tend not to see any grounds for intervention.

Some suggested readings:

I spent a few hours of the weekend in the train from Brussels to Luxembourg (I would have gone by car, but I never told you that my car got burn by skinheads who felt like burning a trash can right next to my parked car..). The train takes ages, but it allows for some good reading time. The subject of this trip’s readings (aside from an incredibly good novel in Spanish) was precisely search neutrality.The three pieces I read are highly recommendable:

If Search Neutrality is the Answer; What is the Question? (by G. Manne and J. Wright);

– “Non-Discrimination in Communications and IT Regulation: Understanding the Rise of a Transformative Principle” (forthcoming; can’t say who the author is because the paper is currently undergoing a blind-peer review).

Search Neutrality as an Antitrust Principle (by D. Crane).

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

5 March 2012 at 6:08 pm

The Friday Slot (6) – Jacques Bourgeois

with one comment

Prof. Jacques Bourgeois is on this week’s Friday Slot. A few words about Jacques are in order. I first met him as a student at the College of Europe. He was presenting his seminar during the “beauty context” shopping week, when students select their options. I was impressed, so impressed that I did not chose the seminar, for fear of not being up to the challenge. Jacques seemed a somewhat demanding Professor for the continental student I was, navigating with increasing ease in competition and trade law matters, requesting active student participation, and professing in beautiful English.

Our paths crossed again 8 years after, when I started as the executive secretary of the GCLC. We worked together for several years. In my short career I have had the immense chance to meet very many professionals. Yet, I have rarely seen a lawyer with a such mastery of social skills and management capabilities. Jacques is the kind of person who can turn a tense meeting with irritated attendees into a relaxed, and possibly funny, event. This is maybe why everyone in the business likes him, and why we at Chillin’Competition like him so much. Thanks to him for having taken the time to answer our questions. 

Oscar of the best competition law book? Non-competition book?

In the competition law field, I praise the book of David Gerber: Law and Competition in Twentieth Century Europe. Protecting Prometheus (Oxford University Press, 2001)

Out of the antitrust world, but still related to the legal field, John Rawls’ A Theory of Justice (Belknap, 1971) is a must.

 “Oscar” of the best case-law development in the past year? “Oscar” of the worst case-law development? 

In my opinion, the CJEU made a great job in Confédération européenne des associations d’horlogers-réparateurs (CEAHR) v European Commission (CJEU, 15 December 2010, Case T-427/08).

On the contrary, I am very critical towards the Alrosa ruling (CJEU, European Commission v Alrosa, Case C‑441/07 P).

Let’s do it like economists => assume that you could change 3 rules, principles, judgments, institutions in the current EU competition system. What would you do?

The one reform that I would organize in priority: that fines be decided upon by a court of law.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Nicolas Petit

2 March 2012 at 7:55 pm

Posted in The Friday Slot

Antitrust Chatspeak

with 2 comments

//tr8

Or my first try at using Internet slang for antitrust issues…

BTW, I have to participate to a conference on the pharmaceutical sector in 10 days, and I welcome any fresh intel on //tr8, as well as on any other hot, burning issue relevant to the sector.

Given the industry’s taste for secrecy, you may write to me directly at Nicolas.petit@ulg.ac.be

Written by Nicolas Petit

2 March 2012 at 11:54 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Economics in competition law

with 2 comments

Nicolas’ post from yesterday was somewhat of a declaration of lawove to economics. However, as the post noted, in my personal case this love is not at all unconditional.

Nico’s post stated that the “reptilian reflex of dismissing economics as a source of legal uncertainty is misguided“, but acknowledged that “on this point Alfonso has more nuanced views that he will develop here“.

So, here they are.

Those “more nuanced views” have been recently developed in a couple of pieces co-written by Luis Ortiz Blanco and by myself (one was presented at Fordham’s Annual Conference and the other at a GCLC Annual Conference, and both are about to be published as part of the proceedings of these two events). In these papers we argue that the growing influence of economics in competition law enforcement has brought about many positive consequences, but that we should be mindful of letting the about pendulum swing too far. We submit that there is a limit to the concessions that a legal regime can make without renouncing its nature, and that effects-based legality tests might approach decision-making to economic divination to the prejudice of legal certainty.

I’m conscious that these thoughts may not appear be shared by the mainstream (I don’t expect them to make me the most popular guy if I go to Place Lux for a drink tonight). Nevertheless, I do tend to think that there is a silent large minority/majority that supports these ideas. In fact, a very prominent European Commission official read outloud the following paragraphs from one of our papers at a conference held two or three months ago (by the way: he said he liked them, not that he endorsed them), and invited the attendants to reflect on them:

(If interested, click here to continue reading)

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

1 March 2012 at 2:18 pm