Are Article 82 EC and Intellectual Property Interoperable? The State of the Law Pending the Judgment in Microsoft v. Commission
Maurits Dolmans, Paul-John Loewenthal, Robert O’Donoghue, Apr 19, 2007
The objectives of intellectual property rights (IPR) and competition law are essentially the same: both promote innovation to the benefit of consumers. IPRs are, however blunt instruments that strike the right balance in general, but in exceptional individual situations may not achieve (and may sometimes even obstruct) the innovation policy goal. Competition law is a useful tool to redress the balance in these situations, and the European Commission and EC courts have recognized that in exceptional cases the exercise of IPRs may infringe competition law. This article examines the extent to which Article 82 EC restricts the use of IPRs, pending the judgment of the CFI in Case T-201/04, Microsoft v. Commission.
Links to Full Content
Featured News
Attorneys in NCAA Antitrust Case Awarded $475M in Fees
Jun 8, 2025 by
CPI
SEC Grants Elon Musk Additional Six Weeks to Respond in Twitter Stake Disclosure Suit
Jun 8, 2025 by
CPI
Judge Dismisses Key Claims Against Google in Publishers’ Piracy Suit
Jun 8, 2025 by
CPI
Indian Regulator Probes Asian Paints After Complaint by Aditya Birla’s Birla Opus
Jun 8, 2025 by
CPI
The 10-Year Ban on State AI Law Lives, At Least for Now, in Senate Version of Budget Bill
Jun 8, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Industrial Policy
May 21, 2025 by
CPI
Industrial Strategy and the Role of Competition – Taking a Business Lens
May 21, 2025 by
Marcus Bokkerink
Industrial Policy, Antitrust, and Economic Growth: Some Observations
May 21, 2025 by
David S. Evans
Bolder by Design: Crafting Pro-Competitive Industrial Policies For Complex Challenges
May 21, 2025 by
Antonio Capobianco & Beatriz Marques
Competition-Friendly Industrial Policy
May 21, 2025 by
Philippe Aghion, Mathias Dewatripont & Patrick Legros