Please find below the links that I enjoyed during the month September 2018. Mostly antitrust, but not limited to it. In no particular order:
- High Time for Rhyme and Reason (Philip Marsden)
- Requiem for a Paradox: The Dubious Rise and Inevitable Fall of Hipster Antitrust (Joshua D. Wright, Elyse Dorsey, Jan Rybnicek, Jonathan Klick)
- The Misguided Assault on the Consumer Welfare Standard in the Age of Platform Markets (D. Melamed, Nicolas Petit)
- Facebook’s Volatile Year in One Giant Chart (Jenny Scribani)
- The Elasticity of Science (Kyle Myers)
- The Network of Law Reviews: Citation Cartels, Scientific Communities, and Journal Rankings (Oren Perez, Judit Bar-Ilan, Reuven Cohen, Nir Schreiber)
- The Antitrust F Word: Fairness Considerations in Competition Law (Sandra Marco Colino)
- Competition and Algorithms (Michal Gal & Caron Beaton-Wells)
- European Competition Law Is Hurting Consumers (Tom Struble)
- Why Patent Hold-Up Does Not Violate Antitrust Law (Gregory J. Werden, Luke M. Froeb)
- Does the “Consumer Welfare Standard” Still Protect Competition? Opinions from FTC Antitrust Hearings (Emily Pierce, Mark David Blafkin)
- Liberal Radicalism: Formal Rules for a Society Neutral Among Communities (Vitalik Buterin, Zoë Hitzig, E. Glen Weyl)
- The Liberal Radicalism Mechanism for Producing Public Goods (Alex Tabarrok)
- Rodney Brooks on Artificial Intelligence (Russ Roberts)
- How The Antitrust Battles Of The ’90s Set The Stage For Today’s Tech Giants (Adi Robertson)
Thibault Schrepel
(@LeConcurrential)