Stephen Dnes (@stephendnes) 's Twitter Profile
Stephen Dnes

@stephendnes

Lawyer with experience of a wide range of antitrust and competition law matters from practice in Brussels, London and New York. Focus on tech cases.

ID: 2168494640

calendar_today01-11-2013 14:05:10

736 Tweet

344 Followers

334 Following

Antitrust Division (@justiceatr) 's Twitter Profile Photo

DON’T FORGET: Our Anticompetitive Regulations Task Force wants your input regarding state and federal laws and regulations that undermine free market competition and harm consumers, workers, & businesses. Submit by May 27! 🔗: justice.gov/opa/pr/justice…

DON’T FORGET: Our Anticompetitive Regulations Task Force wants your input regarding state and federal laws and regulations that undermine free market competition and harm consumers, workers, &  businesses. Submit by May 27! 

🔗: justice.gov/opa/pr/justice…
Thibault Schrepel (@profschrepel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This really is the official text of the AI Act. Regulating as it does was the only possible way, what other jurisdictions are doing clearly falls short in comparison (according to EU institutions). Let's see what the CJEU has to say about it...

This really is the official text of the AI Act.

Regulating as it does was the only possible way, what other jurisdictions are doing clearly falls short in comparison (according to EU institutions). Let's see what the CJEU has to say about it...
Network Law Review (@networklawrev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NEW paper by Richard Gilbert (UC Berkeley): Antitrust agencies mention “innovation” but rarely analyze it seriously. New “dynamic capabilities” framework could help, but courts won’t balance future innovation benefits against current price harms. networklawreview.org/gilbert-merger/

NEW paper by Richard Gilbert (<a href="/UCBerkeley/">UC Berkeley</a>):

Antitrust agencies mention “innovation” but rarely analyze it seriously. New “dynamic capabilities” framework could help, but courts won’t balance future innovation benefits against current price harms.

networklawreview.org/gilbert-merger/
Stephen Dnes (@stephendnes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Some very interesting insights into the unwritten rules of US merger antitrust here, especially the adage that you need at least 2/3 of hot documents, econ analysis, and customer complaints, 3 if you can, and if you only have 1, it’s not enough.

Sam Bowman (@s8mb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is a great piece that all of us non-experts who like to “trespass” into fields dominated by experts will enjoy.

Adam Thierer (@adamthierer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

many people are suddenly wondering about where the FCC got all this power to harass and intimidate speakers. One might even ask, "Why Regulate Broadcasting?" That's a great question. It turns out that I spent the first half of my 34-year career writing all about that issue, and

many people are suddenly wondering about where the FCC got all this power to harass and intimidate speakers. One might even ask, "Why Regulate Broadcasting?" 

That's a great question. It turns out that I spent the first half of my 34-year career writing all about that issue, and
Adam Thierer (@adamthierer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

hard to overstate just how much AI and data center growth is doing to fuel the economy currently, but here's another data point: AI-related products responsible for 42% of trade growth this year. 🤯 wsj.com/economy/trade/…

hard to overstate just how much AI and data center growth is doing to fuel the economy currently, but here's another data point: AI-related products responsible for 42% of trade growth this year. 🤯

wsj.com/economy/trade/…
Stephen Dnes (@stephendnes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A very interesting survey from CCIA Europe confirming that personalization is helpful to the majority of web users ccianet.org/news/2025/10/h…

Herbert hovenkamp (@sherman1890) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Google's cert. petition agnst Epic Games (10-27, 9th Cir.) asks whether rule of reason antitrust plaintiff has a burden to prove a less restrictive alternative; and also attacks the notion that Trinko's refusal to deal doctrine does not apply to remedies. documentcloud.org/documents/2619…

Josh Wright (@joshwright1977) 's Twitter Profile Photo

While Tim Wu is quite wrong about the decision, that is not the important lesson in FTC v. Meta. Nor is Judge Boasberg’s politics. The right (and hard) lesson is that the Khan FTC deprioritized economics and it shows up not only in MGs and policy docs but also in the way

Herbert hovenkamp (@sherman1890) 's Twitter Profile Photo

vikram pathania and my Wharton colleague Serguei Netessine have published (2026) an interesting paper on Amazon distribution facilities and economic growth, finding that they lead to higher local employment, reduced poverty and an increase in median income. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.10…

Herbert hovenkamp (@sherman1890) 's Twitter Profile Photo

impt paper by Shapiro & Yurukoglu is out in J. Pol. Econ. 3 impt takeaways: 1) the idea that competition is declining is unsupported; 2) merger outcomes are heterogenous; 3) some (hospitals) are problematic while others (air, groceries) much less so. journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.108…

Herbert hovenkamp (@sherman1890) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Boston Univ. Law Review will soon publish my piece on the Google remedies decision. One takeaway: if you want to use an antitrust remedy to make a market more competitive a breakup is not the best way to do it. papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf…