1,256 research outputs found
Patents and Antitrust: Application to Adjacent Markets
We examine the intersection of patents and antitrust where a patent
holder uses the monopoly power it possesses in the market for a patented
product to exclude competitors in an adjacent market and attempt to
monopolize or monopolize the adjacent market. The present scheme for
awarding patents cannot judge when the issuance of a patent will lead to
the appropriate balance between innovation and economic efficiency.
Where a patent holder’s invention uses an interface with adjacent
products, the patent holder may be tempted to extend its patent monopoly
into adjacent markets that depend upon the interface with the patented
invention. Economic theory suggests that it is inappropriate to immunize
a patent holder from antitrust liability when it attempts to extend its
patent monopoly into adjacent markets because it could decrease consumer
surplus. Courts have expressed their reluctance to scrutinize a patent
holder’s innovations and design changes because of the potential
benefits of the innovations and their reluctance to second-guess the
marketplace. However, applying traditional antitrust principles, courts
have found that monopolists could be liable for unlawfully extending
their monopoly positions into adjacent markets in the areas of computer
peripherals and software applications; aftermarkets for replacement
parts, service and maintenance of durable goods; design changes to
medical devices; and changes in drug formulas. While the patent laws
provide a spur to innovation by granting limited monopoly rights, the
antitrust laws curb the excessive reach of these monopoly rights by
acting as a check on excessive expansion of the scope of the patent
grant. Courts are the only participants in the legal process that have
the competence to ensure that patents do not cause economic stagnation
and harm by permitting a patent holder to extend its monopoly into an
adjacent market. Consequently, courts should be willing to apply
antitrust principles to cases involving the monopolization of interfaces
through design changes
Power-Law Distributions in a Two-sided Market and Net Neutrality
"Net neutrality" often refers to the policy dictating that an Internet
service provider (ISP) cannot charge content providers (CPs) for delivering
their content to consumers. Many past quantitative models designed to determine
whether net neutrality is a good idea have been rather equivocal in their
conclusions. Here we propose a very simple two-sided market model, in which the
types of the consumers and the CPs are {\em power-law distributed} --- a kind
of distribution known to often arise precisely in connection with
Internet-related phenomena. We derive mostly analytical, closed-form results
for several regimes: (a) Net neutrality, (b) social optimum, (c) maximum
revenue by the ISP, or (d) maximum ISP revenue under quality differentiation.
One unexpected conclusion is that (a) and (b) will differ significantly, unless
average CP productivity is very high
Crafting a Systematic Literature Review on Open-Source Platforms
This working paper unveils the crafting of a systematic literature review on
open-source platforms. The high-competitive mobile devices market, where
several players such as Apple, Google, Nokia and Microsoft run a platforms- war
with constant shifts in their technological strategies, is gaining increasing
attention from scholars. It matters, then, to review previous literature on
past platforms-wars, such as the ones from the PC and game-console industries,
and assess its implications to the current mobile devices platforms-war. The
paper starts by justifying the purpose and rationale behind this literature
review on open-source platforms. The concepts of open-source software and
computer-based platforms were then discussed both individually and in unison,
in order to clarify the core-concept of 'open-source platform' that guides this
literature review. The detailed design of the employed methodological strategy
is then presented as the central part of this paper. The paper concludes with
preliminary findings organizing previous literature on open-source platforms
for the purpose of guiding future research in this area.Comment: As presented in 10th IFIP WG 2.13 International Conference on Open
Source Systems, OSS 2014, San Jos\'e, Costa Rica, May 6-9, 201
Patents and Antitrust: Application to Adjacent Markets
We examine the intersection of patents and antitrust where a patent
holder uses the monopoly power it possesses in the market for a patented
product to exclude competitors in an adjacent market and attempt to
monopolize or monopolize the adjacent market. The present scheme for
awarding patents cannot judge when the issuance of a patent will lead to
the appropriate balance between innovation and economic efficiency.
Where a patent holder's invention uses an interface with adjacent
products, the patent holder may be tempted to extend its patent monopoly
into adjacent markets that depend upon the interface with the patented
invention. Economic theory suggests that it is inappropriate to immunize
a patent holder from antitrust liability when it attempts to extend its
patent monopoly into adjacent markets because it could decrease consumer
surplus. Courts have expressed their reluctance to scrutinize a patent
holder's innovations and design changes because of the potential
benefits of the innovations and their reluctance to second-guess the
marketplace. However, applying traditional antitrust principles, courts
have found that monopolists could be liable for unlawfully extending
their monopoly positions into adjacent markets in the areas of computer
peripherals and software applications; aftermarkets for replacement
parts, service and maintenance of durable goods; design changes to
medical devices; and changes in drug formulas. While the patent laws
provide a spur to innovation by granting limited monopoly rights, the
antitrust laws curb the excessive reach of these monopoly rights by
acting as a check on excessive expansion of the scope of the patent
grant. Courts are the only participants in the legal process that have
the competence to ensure that patents do not cause economic stagnation
and harm by permitting a patent holder to extend its monopoly into an
adjacent market. Consequently, courts should be willing to apply
antitrust principles to cases involving the monopolization of interfaces
through design changes
Ipsographing the Dubject; or, The Contradictions of Twitter
Precise control of self-renewal and differentiation of progenitor cells into the cranial neural crest (CNC) pool ensures proper head development, guided by signaling pathways such as BMPs, FGFs, Shh and Notch. Here, we show that murine Sox2 plays an essential role in controlling progenitor cell behavior during craniofacial development. A "Conditional by Inversion" Sox2 allele (Sox2(COIN) ) has been employed to generate an epiblast ablation of Sox2 function (Sox2(EpINV) ). Sox2 (EpINV/+(H)) haploinsufficient and conditional (Sox2(EpINV/mosaic) ) mutant embryos proceed beyond gastrulation and die around E11. These mutant embryos exhibit severe anterior malformations, with hydrocephaly and frontonasal truncations, which could be attributed to the deregulation of CNC progenitor cells during their epithelial to mesenchymal transition. This irregularity results in an exacerbated and aberrant migration of Sox10(+) NCC in the branchial arches and frontonasal process of the Sox2 mutant embryos. These results suggest a novel role for Sox2 as a regulator of the epithelial to mesenchymal transitions (EMT) that are important for the cell flow in the developing head
"The trauma of competition": the entry of Air Products Inc. into the industrial gases business in Britain and continental Europe 1947-1970
The British Oxygen Company (BOC) had a virtual monopoly on the supply of industrial gases (e.g. oxygen and acetylene) on the British market through the 1950s, when it was finally challenged by an American-based company, Air Products. Air Products Limited (APL) was able to undercut BOCs position, overcoming high barriers to entry to gain significant market share in this sector, which shares some features of network industries. Factors in this success included conditions imposed by the Board of Trade, APL’s innovations, BOC’s slow response, and favourable market conditions. APL’s success had implications for the internationalisation of the industrial gases industry
Postmodern professions? The fragmentation of legal education and the legal profession
This article considers the institutional dimensions of professionalism and the legal profession's struggle with the challenges of post-modernity. An aspect of this is the Law Society's Training Framework Review (TFR) which promises changes to solicitors' education from 'cradle to grave'. The first part of the article analyses the structure and drivers of the TFR, their origins, and how they will be articulated. Secondly, the TFR is considered in the context of the political economy of higher education and its role in the new capitalism. Finally, we examine the potential effects of the TFR for the legal profession in the context of increasing practice segmentation and the threat of deprofessionalization, and also for the Law Society itself, whether it can retain a key role in the life course of the legal profession
A characteristics framework for Semantic Information Systems Standards
Semantic Information Systems (IS) Standards play a critical role in the development of the networked economy. While their importance is undoubted by all stakeholders—such as businesses, policy makers, researchers, developers—the current state of research leaves a number of questions unaddressed. Terminological confusion exists around the notions of “business semantics”, “business-to-business interoperability”, and “interoperability standards” amongst others. And, moreover, a comprehensive understanding about the characteristics of Semantic IS Standards is missing. The paper addresses this gap in literature by developing a characteristics framework for Semantic IS Standards. Two case studies are used to check the applicability of the framework in a “real-life” context. The framework lays the foundation for future research in an important field of the IS discipline and supports practitioners in their efforts to analyze, compare, and evaluate Semantic IS Standard
'Education, education, education' : legal, moral and clinical
This article brings together Professor Donald Nicolson's intellectual interest in professional legal ethics and his long-standing involvement with law clinics both as an advisor at the University of Cape Town and Director of the University of Bristol Law Clinic and the University of Strathclyde Law Clinic. In this article he looks at how legal education may help start this process of character development, arguing that the best means is through student involvement in voluntary law clinics. And here he builds upon his recent article which argues for voluntary, community service oriented law clinics over those which emphasise the education of students
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