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You are hereAntitrustGoogle's Global Antitrust Rap Sheet -- Google Now Has Violated Antitrust Laws in 10 Different WaysSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2013-01-31 18:42Given that Google has just submitted detailed antitrust remedies to rectify the EU's findings that Google has abused its market dominance in four different ways, and given that earlier this year the FTC found that Google violated antitrust laws in a fifth different way, it is instructive and important to simply chronicle all of Google antitrust violations in one place to let the consistency, breadth, and seriousness of Google's anti-competitive behavior sink in. Please don't miss: "Google's Global Antitrust Rap Sheet" -- here. First, it shows that Google has violated antitrust laws in TEN DIFFERENT ways over the last five years!
Second, Google is under antitrust scrutiny, investigation, or supervision in NINE DIFFERENT countries and the EU.
The obvious takeaway here is Google is a global serial antitrust offender and recidivist. The Google Lobby Defines Big Internet's Policy Agenda -- Part 6 Internet as Oz SeriesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Wed, 2013-01-16 14:53Google not only dominates the web, the Google Lobby also dominates Big Internet's policy agenda in Washington in part via its new proxy, the Internet Association, the self-appointed "unified voice of the Internet economy." Since market dominance attracts antitrust scrutiny, it necessitates lobbying dominance. The FTC's antitrust investigation prompted Google to hire twelve lobbying firms in a week and to rapidly organize them and legions of law and PR firms into one of the top corporate lobbying operations influencing Washington. Tellingly, a Wall Street Journal op-ed lionized "Google's $25 Million Bargain" lobby and Politico got behind-the-scenes to explain "How Google Beat the Feds." What If Microsoft Exited the Search Business? -- My Daily Caller Op-edSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2013-01-14 11:46Please don't miss my Daily Caller Op-ed: "What if Microsoft Exited the Search Business?" -- here. Top Takeaways from FTC's Google Antitrust Decisions -- Part 16 Google Unaccountability SeriesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2013-01-07 11:21Summary of Top Takeaways from the FTC's Google Antitrust Decisions:
1. Google's U.S. search bias win establishes a broad Internet-friendly FTC antitrust enforcement precedent. Top Ten Unanswered Questions on FTC-Google Antitrust Outcome -- Google Unaccountability Series Part 15Submitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2013-01-03 11:28The FTC's reported closing of its Google search bias investigation with no real enforceable settlement mechanism and a special new self-enforcement antitrust precedent apparently only available to Google, raises serious questions about the integrity of the FTC's law enforcement process and whether the FTC accords Google with special treatment not available to other companies. This matter raises many more troubling questions than the top ten unanswered questions raised in this piece, but these questions zero in on many of the most glaring irregularities for Congressional overseers, the media and government watchdogs to follow up on. Google's Twelve Days of Christmas -- A SatireSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2012-12-17 22:08Please sing to the tune of "The Twelve Days of Christmas." On the twelfth day of Christmas the FTC gave to me: Twelve winkers winking Eleven fibbers fibbing Ten bluffs a bluffing Nine Google's poodles Eight flacks a flacking Seven fawns a fawning Six cov-er-ups No enforce-ment! ... Four lap-dog-gies Three big passes Two lame-ex-cuses Troubling Irregularities Mount in FTC Commissioners' Handling of Google Antitrust Investigation -- Part 14 Google Unaccountability SeriesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2012-12-17 00:25The mounting number of unprecedented, inexplicable, and troubling irregularities in the FTC's cumulative law enforcement record of Google warrants oversight by Congress and renewed vigilance by other law enforcement officials -- State Attorneys General, the DOJ, and the European Commission -- in order to maintain the integrity and deterrent value of the antitrust law enforcement process. Each of the following sets of facts and circumstances in the FTC's law enforcement experience with Google have raised eyebrows, together there is head-shaking cumulative evidence that reeks of either special treatment for Google or political interference by Google in the process. Consider the following evidence to judge for yourself if something appears amiss here. Only Google has been able to get FTC commissioners to twice politically overrule staff recommendations to prosecute after in-depth antitrust investigations, in approving Google-AdMob despite "serious concerns," and in rushing to close the current Google search bias investigation without seeking the most incriminating evidence available. My Op-ed for The Hill: Courts Not FTC Should Decide on Google's PracticesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2012-12-10 16:33Please don't miss my new Op-ed for The Hill here, entitled "Courts, Not FTC, Should Decide On Google Practices." Simply, why shouldn't a court of law, based on the law, due process and the facts be the entity to ultimately decide if Google is guilty or innocent of deceptive search bias, not the FTC?
Oversight Questions for FTC's Handling of Google Antitrust Probe -- Part 12 Google Unaccountability SeriesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2012-11-30 11:55The number and seriousness of irregularities, deficiencies, and unanswered questions in the FTC's antitrust investigation of Google's alleged search bias warrant oversight by the Senate and House Antitrust Subcommittees and investigative reporting by the media.
Why FTC Can't Responsibly End the Google Search Bias Antitrust Investigation -- Part 11 Google Unaccountability SeriesSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2012-11-27 17:41Press reports indicate that some at the FTC may be questioning if there is sufficient evidence to prove in court the search bias charges recommended by FTC prosecutors. What the media surprisingly has yet to report is that the FTC still has not yet gained access to the thousands of known and likely most-incriminating Google emails and documents that Google has withheld from antitrust investigators -- per the Texas Attorney General's petition to a Federal Court last June. Intimations that there is no search bias case to prosecute when Google clearly has stonewalled and not fully cooperated with antitrust investigators impugns the integrity of the FTC law enforcement process. These intimations also suggest that Google thinks that its case will be not be decided on the law, merits and evidence, but on political pressure it can bring to bear on the prosecution decision or settlement process. Pages |