Online Platforms and Pricing: Adapting Abuse of Dominance Assessments to the Economic Reality of Free Products
Online platforms, which are at the forefront of today's economy, are subject to intensive competition law enforcement. However, the platform business model presents challenges for the application of competition law. Most notably, they appear to offer consumers a great number of their products f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Computer Law & Security Review 2019-03, Vol.35 (3), p.263-280 |
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description | Online platforms, which are at the forefront of today's economy, are subject to intensive competition law enforcement. However, the platform business model presents challenges for the application of competition law. Most notably, they appear to offer consumers a great number of their products for free. The explanation for most of these supposedly free products is offered by two-sided market theory: consumers may not be paying, but the 'other' side of the market is. This other side of the market often consists of advertisers, which pay the platform for access to the consumers' information (to target advertisements) and attention (to show the advertisements). As many of these platforms are now potentially dominant, they come within the scope of competition law's abuse of dominance provision, including the doctrines of predatory and excessive pricing. These price-based theories need to adapt to the often price-less platform business model in order to prevent competition authorities from making both type I and type II enforcement errors. At the same time, competition law enforcement needs to consider-and at times give priority to-other branches of law that address abusive behaviour concerning free products. Through the use of case studies, this article therefore suggests ways in which abuse of dominance assessments can take into account the economic reality of free products. |
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title | Online Platforms and Pricing: Adapting Abuse of Dominance Assessments to the Economic Reality of Free Products |
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