Topic: Antitrust Law
The Supreme Court on Wednesday didn't seem interested in immediately granting the National Football League the broad antitrust law protection the league is seeking. Justices seemed skeptical of arguments that the NFL should be considered one business, not 32 separate teams working together, when it comes ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court considered on Wednesday whether a lawsuit against the National Football League under federal antitrust law should go forward in a dispute over an exclusive licensing deal for sports merchandise. In a closely watched case, the high court during the arguments seemed unlikely to issue a broad ruling sought by the NFL giving it ...
A hat can be a small thing. Then there's the Supreme Court battle over who gets to make official NFL headgear logos. It could end up having a very large effect not only on all professional sports, but also the landscape of business in ...
The Federal Trade Commission sued Intel Corp. on Wednesday, accusing the world's largest computer chip maker of anticompetitive violations in the markets for central processing units (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs) used in personal computers and servers. The following is a look at Intel's previous antitrust tangles: 1991: Intel's ...
