With Microsoft Victory, Courts Go On Epic Killstreak Against FTC Antitrust Agenda
The gaming market remains competitive with a wide variety of options.

In order for a player to be victorious at the end of a video game, he or she typically must defeat the imposing "final boss." It seems Microsoft's acquisition of video game giant Activision brought with it a real-life version of a final duel with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
The FTC's actions to halt a proposed Microsoft-Activision merger deal certainly risked ending the transaction in the same way a defeat can end a game for players. After going through many challenges and gaining approval from other competition regulators around the world, a California judge sided with the American consumer by rejecting the FTC's argument and clearing a path to closing the deal.
The real winner in the FTC's defeat, however, is the consumers.
In attempting to prevent the merger, the FTC had argued that the deal would harm competition in the video game industry. This aggressive attempt to stop the merger continued even after Microsoft had assured regulators Activision's popular Call of Duty would continue its presence on competitors' consoles, such as Sony's PlayStation.
The court found the FTC did not meet the burden of proof required to justify a preliminary injunction that could pause the acquisition, which needed to close by July 18. Far from seeing the behavior that regulators alleged could lead to consumer harm, the court acknowledged that Microsoft "even took steps to expand Call of Duty to non-Microsoft platforms."
This decision echoes foreign regulators, including the stringent European Union, which has already approved the acquisition. Even the U.K.'s Competition and Markets Authority, which had previously challenged the acquisition, has agreed to pause its case and negotiate with Microsoft to resolve its concerns about the deal.
The gaming market remains competitive with a wide variety of options available to them. Many factors, including the availability of games, go into a consumer's decision about their gaming consumption. In addition to multiple console options, the gaming ecosystem also includes P.C. games and an increasingly popular mobile gaming market. The Microsoft-Activision deal allows Microsoft to acquire popular franchises including Call of Duty and Candy Crush, but it will still face significant competition from Sony and Nintendo.
While this case may be the final boss that this deal needs to defeat, it is only the latest in a string of defeats for the FTC's aggressive antitrust actions against America's leading tech companies––actions that do not appear to be slowing down.
Based on "the possibility Meta's entry would influence competition" in the virtual reality fitness space, another court, an attempt to block Meta's acquisition of V.R. company Within Unlimited, rejected the agency's theory of anticompetitive behavior. In 2021, the FTC unsuccessfully attempted to unwind the previously approved acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp by Meta (the agency was later allowed to proceed with a case following an amended complaint).
Despite this growing losing record for such cases, like a video game player finding extra lives and excuses for poor performance, supporters of the agency's cases like to claim that these losses are actually "wins."
While the FTC loses in court, some members of Congress have been pursuing legislation that, in antitrust cases, would change the rules of the game for the agency in ways that would no longer benefit consumers and instead would favor less successful competitors.
In fact, Senator Amy Klobuchar recently reintroduced the American Innovation and Choice Online Act (AICOA), a bill that would target successful tech companies without the objective economic standards at the heart of the current consumer welfare approach. Instead of seeing antitrust laws as a way to ensure consumers benefit from free-market competition, the theories from the FTC and proposals from Congress would allow the government to intervene much more, dictate the outcome they believe is best, and use antitrust against companies or industries for political purposes.
The FTC's losses have been consumers' wins. The good news is that courts appear to remain committed to the objective analysis at the heart of the consumer welfare standard rather than more creative and potentially harmful theories put forward by the FTC. While this may be the final boss for the Microsoft-Activision deal, the consumer welfare standard still has many more levels to fight.
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>>The real winner in the FTC's defeat, however, is the consumers.
last Activision game I was a consumer of was Pitfall but I still fucking love watching FTC get beat down
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Pitfall on a Commodore 64 ruled!
Commodore 64 ruled, period.
"Whatever you say, Gen X."
I had it on the atari 2600. and then the 800 lol.
Apple II. But I always got killed within 3 frames and went back to playing Choplifter or DigDug or some shit.
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Republicans pounce.
During a House Select Subcommittee on the origins of the Coronavirus pandemic Tuesday, Republican representative Nicole Malliotakis of New York grilled a pair of scientists, demanding to know why they suddenly switched their positions from considering the lab leak of the virus a likelihood to it being a “conspiracy theory” just days after Anthony Fauci emailed them both.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/watch-gop-rep-asks-scientists-why-they-did-180-covid-lab-leak-after-fauci-emailed-them
Republican representative Nicole Malliotakis of New York grilled a pair of scientists
I'm still not sure about lab-cultured meat.
RFK Jr. is not worthy...Wait. What?
National Poll Shows RFK Jr. Tops All Other Politicians In Net Approval-Rating
https://orientalreview.org/2023/07/12/national-poll-shows-rfk-jr-tops-all-other-politicians-in-net-approval-rating/
+21% Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
+9% Elon Musk
+9% Tim Scott
+8% Vivek Ramaswamy
+5% Ron DeSantis
+4% Nikki Haley
-1% Bernie Sanders
-3% Donald Trump, Doug Bergum, Ted Cruz
-6% Maryanne Williamson
-7% Kevin McCarthy, Mike Pence, Asa Hutchinson
-8% Chuck Schumer
-10% Kamala Harris, Joe Manchin, Gavin Newsom
-11% Joe Biden
-12% Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
-16% Chris Christie
-17% Hillary Clinton
-24% Mitch McConnell
Kennedy is tied with Trump for “Favorable” at 45% for each, but whereas Trump has a 48% “Unfavorable” rating, Kennedy’s “Unfavorable” is only 25%; so, if Party-affiliation were not a factor (which was the intention of America’s Founders), then Kennedy would at the present time be the most preferred person to become President.
There was a British poll regarding who people would want as their leader. The results:
Biden 4.7%
Trudeau 7%
Sunak 10.8%
Putin 77.5%
There were 65,959 votes cast.
Got a link?
The story was was on TG. It was a British politician named David Kurten that held it on Twitter. Caveat emptor but funny nonetheless.
9% of people polled don't understand Elon Musk isn't eligible for the position.
Yeah, but we're reluctantly voting for Joe Biden, because a possible nuclear confrontation with China and Russia is preferable to his anti-vaxxer nonsense.
A wise Latina finds a side gig.
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2023/07/sotomayor_caught_muscling_universities_into_buying_thousands_of_her_books_for_a_pretty_penny.html
In order for a player to be victorious at the end of a video game, he or she typically must defeat the imposing "final boss."
Hello my fellow kids.
Repeal anti-trust. Abolish the FTC.
I’m not celebrating and neither should you. The courts should strike down not only official abuse of unconstitutional laws but the unconstitutional laws themselves. The entire Federal Trade Commission is an unconstitutional Agency based on a fraudulent interpretation of the interstate commerce clause. There is nothing whatever in the Constitution that gives Congress the authority to prevent collusion or forbid monopolies. Even the notion of “restraint of trade” is a lie! Unless you commit one of very few actual crimes against your competitors, it is not possible for you to restrain their trade. And if you break your competitor’s kneecaps to eliminate competition – or threaten to – you have committed a crime that is punishable in and of itself, so no need for a regulation in the first place. This is all just excuses for power-hungry politicians to grab more power, create more opportunities for graft and corruption and justify feeding at the public trough.
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It's always amazing that an ostensibly libertarian rag is celebrating *less* competition.
But then, look at the donor list and it all makes sense.
Don't think that's the case. Their talking about market competition vs. competition as mandated or defined by government bureaucrats. Once again winners and losers being chosen by government rather than the markets and thus the public.
When was Wesley Mouch appointed as head of the FTC? Who is John Gault?
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