Amazon may face a new wave of litigation battles if the company is allowed to proceed with plans to buy the rights to Web address suffixes such as .author and .book, say reports. Publishers are apparently concerned that selling book-related suffixes will lead to market abuses as the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers looks to sell their control. While he has not threatened a legal challenge, lawyer and president of the Authors Guild Scott Turow wrote to the ICANN arguing that selling control of generic address suffices is “plainly anticompetitive, allowing already dominant, well-capitalized companies to expand and entrench their market power.”
Featured News
UK Regulator Reopens Probe Into Microsoft’s Cloud Licensing Practices
Mar 31, 2026 by
CPI
Homebuyers’ Antitrust Case Against Top Brokerages Survives Key Court Challenge
Mar 30, 2026 by
CPI
KFTC Probes Paint Industry Over Suspected Price-Fixing Amid Cost Surge
Mar 30, 2026 by
CPI
Sysco to Acquire Jetro Restaurant Depot in $29 Billion Deal
Mar 30, 2026 by
CPI
Australia’s ACCC Faces Pressure to Approve Fuel Collaboration Among Miners
Mar 30, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Competitor Collaborations
Mar 26, 2026 by
CPI
Between Scylla and Charybdis – Navigating Transatlantic Antitrust Currents
Mar 26, 2026 by
Tilman Kuhn & Niklas Brüggemann
Cartel Enforcement Moves Into the Labor Market: Trends and Implications
Mar 26, 2026 by
Andreas Kafetzopoulos & Caroline Janssens
Rethinking Buy-Side Antitrust “Group Boycotts”
Mar 26, 2026 by
Craig Falls & Brendan McGuire
Positive Collaborations: The Tools Available to Competition Authorities to Encourage Beneficial Interactions Between Competitors
Mar 26, 2026 by
Rona Bar-Isaac & Thomas Withers