Jon Leibowitz, ex presidente de la Comisión Federal de Comercio durante la administración de Barack Obama, estuvo en Massachusetts el martes 3 de abril para protestar contra un proyecto de ley estatal que crea sus propias reglas y regulaciones de neutralidad de red y permite cambiar los términos de contrato a proveedores de servicios de Internet, así como modificar aspectos de privacidad en línea. La iniciativa de ley se presentó en reacción a las acciones de la Comisión Federal de Comunicaciones (FCC), quien hace pocos meses eliminó estas regulaciones a nivel federal.
Featured News
FTC Reaches $17M Settlement With Xponential Fitness Over Franchise Violations
Mar 19, 2026 by
CPI
Trump Administration Defends Pentagon Blacklisting of AI Firm Anthropic in Court Filing
Mar 18, 2026 by
CPI
BMG Sues Anthropic Over Alleged Use of Song Lyrics in AI Training
Mar 18, 2026 by
CPI
Google Proposes New Search Controls Amid UK Competition Scrutiny
Mar 18, 2026 by
CPI
US Appeals Court Revives Whistleblower Case Against Major Drugmakers Over Pricing Program
Mar 18, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Data-Driven Competition
Mar 19, 2026 by
CPI
Data-Driven Competition: Implications For Enforcement and Merger Control
Mar 19, 2026 by
Alexandre de Corniere & Greg Taylor
From Tipping to Trustees: Why Data-Driven Markets Require Institutional Design, Not Optimization
Mar 19, 2026 by
Jens Prüfer & Paul de Bijl
Data Barriers to Entry: What We’ve Learned About Spotting Them and What We Still Don’t Know About Solutions
Mar 19, 2026 by
Bruno Carballa-Smichowski
When the Perfect Is the Enemy of the Good: Price Discrimination, Affordability, Precarity and Market Dynamism
Mar 19, 2026 by
Dan Ciuriak