By Eddie Pells/AP | October 8, 2024
The settlement would resolve three major antitrust lawsuits filed against the NCAA. The value of new payments and benefits to college athletes is expected to exceed $20 billion over 10 years.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | October 8, 2024
This article highlights key themes from Fordham Law's 51st Annual Conference on International Antitrust Law and Policy, and Antitrust Economics Workshop.
By Marianna Wharry | October 8, 2024
"All things being considered, fifty custodians certainly provide a reasonable opportunity—at the very least—for the plaintiffs to reasonably investigate their case. Adding three or four in-house counsel to that list is out of proportion to the needs of the case. The aphorism, 'the book is not worth the candle' is not out of place here," wrote U.S. District Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole for the Northern District of Illinois.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | October 7, 2024
"The Defendants have used and continue to use their monopoly power to exploit the Plaintiffs and the class both during and after their college athletic careers by fixing the amount they may be paid for their NIL at zero," according to the allegations in the complaint.
By Linda A. Thompson | October 7, 2024
The Belgian-Swiss, Harvard-educated lawyer joined TikTok from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer's Brussels office last year.
By Maria Dinzeo | October 7, 2024
Judge James Donato said that Google built the Play Store into such a fortress that even a behemoth like Amazon couldn't compete.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | October 7, 2024
Global meatpacking companies have sold wholesale beef at "artificially high, noncompetitive levels throughout the United States" under an unlawful agreement, McDonald's alleges in an antitrust complaint filed by Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft.
By Mimi Lamarre | October 7, 2024
Stephen Mohr, who just left the FTC, said he "anticipates agencies will continue to be aggressive in bringing merger enforcement challenges."
By James Palmer | October 4, 2024
The same day the Department of Justice sued Visa, the company set aside another $1.5 billion for its U.S. litigation escrow fund.
By Ross Todd | October 4, 2024
Kirkland's Dan Laytin, Christa Cottrell and Cameron Ginder won a summary judgment ruling finding ROSS Intelligence hadn't shown that Thomson Reuters' Westlaw inappropriately tied its public law database to its search tool in violation of antitrust laws.
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