Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 5th Jan 2013 14:53 UTC
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You obviously has no real knowledge about competition law yet you feel compelled to express views and opinions as if you do... I just do not understand that attitude.
Maybe because I have enough to form an opinion and these views are not only my own?
For the record: Googles actions in this case are highly anti competitive, and illegal (besides immoral).
I'd like to see an actual reasoning behind the whole "You're wrong" comment.
That's why it only took them a day to "fix the problem".. Obviously cheaper than paying a $Billion$ fine.
Is that your only proof? I mean, you could link to the appropriate legal document that explains it(like proper scholars do). Not just cite circumstances.
My reference is:
Communication from the Commission — Guidance on the Commission's enforcement priorities in applying Article 82 of the EC Treaty to abusive exclusionary conduct by dominant undertakings (2009/C 45/02) <- The whole document explains what and how.
THE TREATY ON THE FUNCTIONING OF THE EUROPEAN UNION, Art 102




Member since:
2008-10-30
Microsoft was never condemned for pulling IE from Mac, even though IE had the dominant position as the browser. You know why? Because removing yourself from a market segment is not anti-competitive.
The fact that Apple could write an app that is in direct competition to Google's app only reinforces the claim that Google has done nothing to restrict competition in that market. Therefore is not anti-competitive by definition.
You obviously has no real knowledge about competition law yet you feel compelled to express views and opinions as if you do... I just do not understand that attitude.
For the record: Googles actions in this case are highly anti competitive, and illegal (besides immoral). That's why it only took them a day to "fix the problem".. Obviously cheaper than paying a $Billion$ fine.