Synopolies: The use of cryptographic technologies to impede competition in multiple jurisdictions


Autoria(s): Cradduck, Lucy; Caelli, Bill; McCullagh, Adrian
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Many jurisdictions have developed mature infrastructures, both administratively and legislatively, to promote competition. Substantial funds have been expended to monitor activities that are anticompetitive and many jurisdictions also have adopted a form of "Cartel Leniency Program", first developed by the US Federal Trade Commission, to assist in cartel detection. Further, some jurisdictions are now criminalizing cartel behaviour so that cartel participants can be held criminally liable with substantial custodial penalties imposed. Notwithstanding these multijurisdictional approaches, a new form of possibly anticompetitive behaviour is looming. Synergistic monopolies („synopolies‟) involve not competitors within a horizontal market but complimentors within separate vertical markets. Where two complimentary corporations are monopolists in their own market they can, through various technologies, assist each other to expand their respective monopolies thus creating a barrier to new entrants and/or blocking existing participants from further participation in that market. The nature of the technologies involved means that it is easy for this potentially anti-competitive activity to enter and affect the global marketplace. Competition regulators need to be aware of this potential for abuse and ensure that their respective competition frameworks appropriately address this activity. This paper discusses how new technologies can be used to create a synopoly.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/30740/

Publicador

The Forum on Public Policy

Relação

http://forumonpublicpolicy.com/archivespring08/cradduck.pdf

Cradduck, Lucy, Caelli, Bill, & McCullagh, Adrian (2008) Synopolies: The use of cryptographic technologies to impede competition in multiple jurisdictions. Forum on Public Policy Online, Spring, pp. 1-43.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Information Security Institute

Palavras-Chave #080503 Networking and Communications #180115 Intellectual Property Law #180199 Law not elsewhere classified #monopoly, synopoly, cartel, competition, black box technology
Tipo

Journal Article