Bloomberg Law

NCAA, Athletes Seek Approval of Player-Payment Settlement

Attorneys for athlete plaintiffs filed for preliminary approval of a $2.8 billion landmark settlement with the NCAA and its Power Five conferences, with an average payout for athletes that highlights a gender disparity.

Courts Show Little Interest in Skidmore as a Chevron Alternative

Federal judges reviewing agency actions have largely omitted from their rulings an 80-year-old precedent calling for a mild form of deference to the government in the month since the US Supreme Court struck down the more powerful Chevron doctrine.

Microsoft Outage Sharpens Antitrust Scrutiny on Cloud Giants

An IT failure that caused millions of Microsoft Windows devices to crash, upending business across the globe, adds to the scrutiny that cloud providers are under as regulators start to more sharply examine consolidation in the industry.

FTC’s Khan Backs Open AI Models in Bid to Avoid Monopolies

Open artificial intelligence models that allow developers to customize them with few restrictions are more likely to promote competition, Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan said, weighing in on a key debate within the industry.

DOJ, Assa Abloy Reach Deal on Scope of Antitrust Monitor’s Probe

The Justice Department reached a deal with Assa Abloy AB on the scope of an investigation they agreed to as part of an antitrust settlement, in what appears to end a bitter dispute over the bounds of that probe.

Latest Stories

EXPLORE BLOOMBERG LAW

Get the latest legal, regulatory, and enforcement news and analysis, as well as in-depth business and industry covering in the following areas: