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Refusal to supply IP in the EU after Microsoft

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... degree, the relevant issues might fit in the traditional' criteria. 9 ... But cases will be decided on the basis of rigorous assessment of specific facts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Refusal to supply IP in the EU after Microsoft


1
Refusal to supply (IP) in the EU after Microsoft
ABA Fall Meeting Brussels, September 26th 2008
  • Nicholas Banasevic
  • DG Competition, European Commission
  • (speaking in a personal capacity - the views
    expressed are not necessarily those of the
    European Commission)

2
The aims of antitrust and IP law
  • There is no intrinsic conflict
  • Both antitrust and IP law have the same general
    aims
  • Promoting innovation
  • Driving economic growth
  • For the benefit of consumers
  • Refusal by a dominant firm to license IP is not
    in itself an abuse
  • (IP does not in itself mean market power)

3
Exceptional circumstances
  • Refusal can be an abuse only in exceptional
    circumstances
  • Magill, IMS, Microsoft
  • Cases are very rare
  • Microsoft was very fact-intensive
  • Contained a great deal of analysis of market
    conditions, effects on consumers, incentives to
    innovate etc.

4
Indispensability
  • No viable alternatives to the information/input
  • To compete in a neighbouring market
  • Extent of dominance important
  • E.g. if your product needs to connect to a
    monopoly product, information about that
    connection more likely to be indispensable

5
Elimination of competition
  • In a neighbouring product market
  • Elimination of effective competition
  • Elimination does not have to be immediate
  • Close link with indispensability
  • i.e. if information is indispensable, without it,
    elimination of competition in the neighbouring
    market is likely

6
New product
  • Refusal prevents emergence of a new product
  • New means not a copy of the dominant firms
    product
  • Microsoft had a detailed analysis of impact on
    consumer
  • Lock-in, elimination of competition, denial of
    choice
  • New, innovative products in the neighbouring
    market were prevented from emerging
  • Competition occurs on the basis of parameters
    other than interoperability
  • Innovative features of other products

7
Objective justification
  • Intellectual property in itself cannot be a
    justification
  • This would be a contradiction
  • Analysis will be fact-specific
  • In Microsoft
  • Rivals couldnt copy/clone Microsofts products
  • Aim of Decision is interoperability
  • Analysis would be different if the information
    allowed a product to be copied

8
Could other exceptional circumstances be relevant?
  • Cutting of previous supply?
  • Importance of interoperability?
  • In Microsoft, CFI did not go into these questions
  • To a degree, the relevant issues might fit in the
    traditional criteria

9
Conclusion
  • Microsoft confirms previous principles
  • But cases will be decided on the basis of
    rigorous assessment of specific facts
  • Misleading to claim that the floodgates will
    open after Microsoft
  • Competition will always be assessed on the merits
    of the products
  • Consumer choice and innovation are key

10
Refusal to supply in the EU after Microsoft
ABA Fall Meeting Brussels, September 26th 2008
  • Nicholas Banasevic
  • DG Competition, European Commission
  • (speaking in a personal capacity - the views
    expressed are not necessarily those of the
    European Commission)
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