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Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;)
From: |
Alexander Terekhov |
Subject: |
Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;) |
Date: |
Wed, 21 Jun 2006 21:51:06 +0200 |
David Kastrup wrote:
[...]
> > That's all bullshit. The FSF simply managed to fool Judge Tinder
> > that Wallace lacks standing. Tinder recorgnized that "Plaintiffâs
> > Third Amended Complaint States a Claim Upon Which Relief can be
> > Granted" and that "Plaintiffâs Allegations Sufficiently Set Forth a
> > Violation of the Rule of Reason", but he was fooled by FSF's "even
> > if it were possible for Plaintiff to allege some harm to competition
> > in the abstract, Plaintiff has not alleged antitrust injury to
> > himself, and thus lacks standing."
>
> You have an interesting notion of "fooled".
-----
Accompanying Injury
Supreme Court case law holds that predatory pricing may inflict
antitrust injury on competitors (Predatory pricing . . . is a
practice that harms both competitors and competition.) (Cargill, Inc.
v. Monfort of Colorado, Inc., 479 U.S. 104, 118 (1986)); ([i]n the
context of pricing practices, only predatory pricing has the requisite
anticompetitive effect) (Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.,
495 U.S. 328, 339 (1990)).
The district court ruled, Antitrust laws are for the protection of
competition, not competitors. Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-o-Mat,
Inc., 429 U.S. 477, 488 (1977) (ENTRY ON DEFENDANTS MOTIONS TO
DISMISS at 3) but the Supreme Court clarified the Brunswick language
in Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co., 495 U.S. 328, 353
(1990):
The "antitrust laws were enacted for `the protection of competition,
not competitors.'" Ante, at 338 (quoting Brown Shoe Co. v. United
States, 370 U.S. 294, 320 (1962)). This proposition - which is often
used as a test of whether a violation of law occurred - cannot be
read to deny all remedial actions by competitors. When competitors
are injured by illicit agreements among their rivals rather than by
the free play of market forces, the antitrust laws protect
competitors precisely for the purpose of protecting competition.
The Ninth Circuit addressed competitor status in American Ad
Management, Inc. v. General Telephone Co. of California, 190 F.3d
1051, 1058 (9th Cir.1999):
Further, it is not the status as a consumer or competitor that
confers antitrust standing, but the relationship between the
defendant's alleged unlawful conduct and the resulting harm to the
plaintiff. See Amaral, 102 F.3d at 1508 ("Losses a competitor
suffers as a result of predatory pricing is a form of antitrust
injury because `predatory pricing has the requisite anticompetitive
effect' against competitors.") (quoting ARCO, 495 U.S. at 339)).
The leading Supreme Court case on predatory pricing under §1 of
the Sherman Act is Matsushita Elec. Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio,
475 US 574 (1986). (This is a Sherman Act 1 case . . .) (fn 8).
Predatory pricing was defined in Matsushita. ([(i)] pricing below
the level necessary to sell their products, or (ii) pricing below
some appropriate measure of cost.) (fn 9).
Judge Richard Posner has acknowledged the heavy fixed costs involved
with the production of intellectual property:
Intellectual property is characterized by heavy fixed costs relative
to marginal costs. It is often very expensive to create, but once it
is created the cost of making additional copies is low, dramatically
so in the case of software, where it is only a slight overstatement
to speak of marginal cost as zero. Antitrust in the New Economy,
(Nov. 2000) U. Chicago Law & Economics, 1, 3,
The Seventh Circuit examined a host of cost measures and found
pricing below long run incremental cost (LRIC) as one appropriate
indicator of predatory pricing. MCI Communications v. AT&T, 708 F.2d
1081, fn 59 (7th Cir. 1983).
Regardless of whether the measure of cost is LRIC or some other
appropriate formula, a final price of no charge leads to the
absurd conclusion that the heavy fixed costs for developing
intellectual property in computer programs are non-existent.
The Supreme Court held that it might be that only direct evidence
(Matsushita at fn 9) is sufficient to demonstrate below-cost
pricing. A contract term fixing licensing fees at no charge is
certainly direct evidence of pricing below long run incremental
cost.
Wallace in his Second Amended Complaint alleged:
The Defendants' pooling and cross licensing of intellectual property
with the described predatory price fixing scheme is foreclosing
competition in the market for computer operating systems. Said
predatory price-fixing scheme prevents Plaintiff Daniel Wallace from
marketing his own computer operating system as a competitor.
Wallace has certainly alleged an injury of the type the antitrust
laws were designed to prevent and that flows from that which makes
defendants acts unlawful.
-----
regards,
alexander.
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/17
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/20
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), David Kastrup, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;),
Alexander Terekhov <=
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), David Kastrup, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Rui Miguel Silva Seabra, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), David Kastrup, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), David Kastrup, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/21
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), David Kastrup, 2006/06/22
- Re: Hey Terekhov: Wallace lost. Who'd guess.... ;), Alexander Terekhov, 2006/06/22