Archive for Thursday, September 14, 2006
U.S. Official Questions Foreign Regulation
A top U.S. antitrust official urged foreign governments to think twice before interfering with popular new technologies, singling out overseas scrutiny of Apple Computer Inc.’s iTunes online music service as an example of misguided enforcement.
Justice Department antitrust chief Thomas Barnett cited proposals by some officials overseas to impose restrictions on iTunes as an example of overzealous regulation that he said could discourage innovation and hurt consumers.
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- Nation watches as a divided California votes on same-sex marriage
- Presidential cars then and now
- Barack Obama wins presidency, making history
- California results
- Gay-rights advocates to challenge Proposition 8 in court
- Lance Armstrong ready for recycling
- MBA students lower their career projections
- Sushi-lover's find: BiMi in Los Angeles
- Voters approve Proposition 8 banning same-sex marriages
- Obama's post-racial promise
- White Americans play major role in electing the first black president
- TV networks simultaneously declare Obama the winner
- John McCain: 'We must move beyond it'
- Michael Crichton, prolific author of 'Jurassic Park' and other thrillers, dies at 66
- Proposition A falls just short of passage
- Obama's victory, Democratic gains will change Washington agenda
- President Bush marks Barack Obama's historic election, vows 'complete cooperation'
- Gay-rights advocates to challenge Proposition 8 in court
- What Obama's win means for politics and America
- Obama's post-racial promise
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