The Center for Journalism and Liberty at Open Markets Welcomes the Release of The Observatory on Information and Democracy’s Global Assessment of Information Ecosystems

The Center for Journalism and Liberty welcomes the publication of a landmark report,  “Information Ecosystems and Troubled Democracy” by the Observatory on Information and Democracy. This landmark document analyzes the most current academic research on information ecosystems and their impact on democracies worldwide.

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Open Markets Weights in on Final USDA Rule to Bring Greater Fairness to Poultry Farming and Unfair Practices Rule Withdrawal

Open Markets Institute food program manager Claire Kelloway comments on the USDA’s finalized rule against deceptive poultry payment tactics and withdrew a proposed rule easing access to justice for unfair treatment by meatpackers.

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Dissent - Supply and the Housing Crisis: A Debate

Chief economist Brian Callci and senior legal analyst Sandeep Vaheesan debate how the YIMBY (short for "Yes In My Backyard") movement, which calls for zoning reforms, falls short of in addressing the nation’s housing affordability crisis, arguing for the federal government to take a more active role in providing housing

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Concurrences - The Google Search Decision

CJL director Courtney Radsch and senior reporter Karina Montoya co-author a piece alongside other antitrust experts examining the legal reasoning behind the U.S. District Court's ruling in United States v. Google LLC and the potential consequences for Google's business operations, and the broader implications for antitrust enforcement in the technology sector.

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Open Markets Institute Files Second Amicus Brief Supporting FTC’s Nationwide Ban on Non-Compete Clauses

The Open Markets Institute filed an amicus brief in Ryan v. FTC, marking the second appellate case in which Open Markets has defended the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) landmark prohibition on non-compete clauses.

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Expert Brief - AI and Market Concentration

Europe director Max von Thun and CJL director Courtney Radsch along with EU Tech Policy Fellow Michelle Nie published an expert brief on how artificial intelligence is becoming increasingly monopolized by Big Tech firms due to high entry barriers and anticompetitive practices, posing risks to competition, privacy, security, innovation, and the environment. They prescribe a set of robust policy interventions to address the problems.

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