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EU: Advantages and Disadvantages of Digital Gatekeeping

GAFA – Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple – and the inability of ex post enforcement of competition law to prevent potential anticompetitive conduct by these firms. [2] Several European jurisdictions are currently considering an overhaul of their competition policy approach towards dominant companies in the digital economy. A common theme is that competition authorities or newly created digital markets agencies could be given the power to regulate dominant companies with a gatekeeper status. As an important first step in this new regulatory approach, policymakers in various jurisdictions have specified the criteria for identifying the firms, or gatekeepers, that are to be subject to regulation.

We are pretty good at adapting to the evolving US visa regulations: Thierry Delaporte

1 min read Premium 1 min read Premium 2 min read Premium 1 min read . 12:47 PM IST It would be naive for me to assume that in six months we have done everything I wanted to accomplish. I am pleased about where we are after six months, and I believe that we have hit the target I had in mind. One is really about getting up-to-speed and be operational on client relationships, operational priorities, and so on. That has happened quite rapidly considering the context of covid. We have not wasted time and turned into execution. Being able to go live with the new organizational structure on 1 January is quite impressive. We have simplified and created a more efficient organization with less people focusing on internal issues, less internal frictions, and more opportunity to dedicate time to clients. There is absolute focus on our clients. The appetite, the energy, and the engagement of the leadership team on deals, is probably greater than it has ever been. So, it’s really the

Europe Regulatory Brief: November 2020

Monday, December 14, 2020 Antitrust and Competition  The Court of Justice of the European Union Reinforces the European Commission’s Strict Approach on Parental Liability for Antitrust Breaches of Subsidiaries  On 28 October 2020, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) confirmed the General Court of the European Union (GCEU) judgment and the fine imposed by the European Commission (Commission) on a tire manufacturer and its subsidiary on the basis of its long-standing case law on parental liability for cartel activity. In this case, Commission imposed in 2014 a €302 fine on a number of manufacturers of underground and submarine cables for a power cable cartel. From 1999 to 2009, the cartel members engaged in market sharing and customer allocation in breach of EU antitrust rules. An Italian tire manufacturer was found jointly and severally liable for the involvement of its former subsidiary in the power cable cartel. The Italian tire manufacturer sold it

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