The Open Markets Institute warmly congratulates the American Economic Liberties Project – headed by Sarah Miller, previously the deputy director of the Open Markets Institute – on its launch today.
Read More"Judge Victor Marrero’s ruling allowing T-Mobile’s acquisition of Sprint further concentrates the national wireless market and empowers all corporations seeking dominance through mergers and acquisitions," said Open Markets Legal Director Sandeep Vaheesan in a statement today.
Read More"We congratulate Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey on her court victory against Facebook, which had refused to provide evidence demanded in her office’s subpoena," said Open Markets Director of Enforcement Strategy Sally Hubbard today in a statement.
Read More"We strongly support the entrepreneurs and independent businesses who are standing up to challenge the dominance of Facebook, Amazon, and Google over America’s markets," said Open Markets Executive Director Barry Lynn in a statement today.
Read MoreThe Open Markets Institute is proud to announce the addition of two new members to its board of directors, Christy Hoffman and Laura Quinn, who will help lead the organization in the fight to protect democracy in America and around the world from dangerous concentrations of power and control.
Read MoreThe Open Markets Institute is very proud to announce the creation of a new, 12-member academic advisory board to help guide and advise Open Markets’ research and policy work.
Read MoreIn response to a report by The New York Times that U.S. Department of Justice Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Makan Delrahim substantively helped T-Mobile and Sprint merge, Open Markets Director of Enforcement Strategy Sally Hubbard makes the following statement.
Read MoreToday, the Open Markets Institute filed an amicus curiae brief in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in its suit against generic drug maker Impax Laboratories.
Read More“Open Markets has long called for reinvigorating the Packers & Stockyards Act," said Open Markets Institute's Food & Power Reporter Claire Kelloway. "This is a transformative step in challenging Big Ag’s monopoly power.”
Read MoreAs Rep. Nancy Pelosi prepares for a showdown in Congress over her Lower Drug Costs Now bill, Open Markets Institute today released The Role of Monopoly in America’s Prescription Drug Crisis.
Read MoreToday, the Open Markets Institute released The Role of Hospital Monopolies in America’s Health Care Crisis, which presents insights into how the astronomically high cost of health care in the United States is a result of increasing corporate concentration of hospital ownership.
Read MoreIn the biggest government antimonopoly case since Microsoft, Open Markets filed an amicus brief in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in its suit against Qualcomm.
Read More"Importing drugs won’t bring prices down significantly because it fails to address the root cause of the problem: monopoly," said Open Markets Managing Editor Michael Bluhm in a statement today.
Read More"This decision proves that Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Makan Delrahim grossly misled the American people when he said he would engage in principle-based enforcement of America's antimonopoly laws, including a tougher opposition to vertical integration by dominant platforms and network monopolies," said Open Markets Executive Director Barry Lynn.
Read More“The Wall Street Journal has finally confirmed that Google engineers search results to serve its own private interests and those of big advertisers and other giant corporations,” said Open Markets Executive Director Barry Lynn. “It’s way past time for our federal and state governments to fix Google.”
Read More“We applaud the nineteen attorneys general for endorsing our petition for an FTC rulemaking on non-competes,” said Open Markets Legal Director Sandeep Vaheesan in a statement. “We reaffirm our call for an FTC rule that bans non-competes for all workers, not just a subset of the labor force.”
Read MoreAhead of the House Judiciary Committee’s hearing today on the perspectives of the antitrust agencies on tech monopolies, and in light of the news of Google’s undisclosed partnership with one of the largest health care systems in the United States, the Open Markets Institute along with eight other public interest groups are demanding that the Federal Trade Commission block Google’s $2.1 billion acquisition of Fitbit.
Read More"While the FCC’s rubber-stamp of the merger is disappointing but not surprising, the group of states challenging the merger in New York next month represents our best hope of protecting our markets and making up for this massive enforcement failure," said Open Markets Reporter and Researcher Matt Buck
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