Newstral
Article
jdsupra.com on 2023-04-11 00:01
Antitrust Division Calls on Activision to Do Its Duty to eSports League Players
Related news
Activision Blizzard Sued by Esports Pros Seeking at Least $680 Million, Alleging Monopoly Over ‘Call of Duty’ Leagues, Tournamentsvariety.com
Activision settles with Justice Department for limiting esports players’ salariesThe Verge
Justice Dept. accuses Activision Blizzard of ‘suppressing’ esports salariesLA Times
No More Games: Activision Settles with DOJ Over Esports Compensationjdsupra.com
DOJ’s Antitrust Division Continues Its Pursuit of Overlapping Directoratesjdsupra.com
[Video] Compliance Into The Weeds - Antitrust Issues in Microsoft Acquisition of Activision Blizzardjdsupra.com
Activision Blizzard settles DOJ lawsuit over eSports wage suppressionengadget
DOJ’s Antitrust Division Withdraws Healthcare Antitrust Policy Statementsjdsupra.com
Activision Reveals First Five ‘Call of Duty’ Esports League Teamsvariety.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Brings First Criminal Wage-Fixing Case: Continuing Enforcement on Labor Market Issuesjdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Announces Updates to Leniency Policy and Plea Agreement Coverage for Individualsjdsupra.com
Antitrust Division Secures First Criminal Attempted Monopolization Guilty Plea in Decadesjdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Updates Corporate Leniency Policyjdsupra.com
As Germany Targets Facebook’s Data Collection, DOJ Antitrust Division Suggests Friendlier Approach to Data-Powered Digital Market Leadersjdsupra.com
Activision Blizzard Faces Call of Duty Tournament Monopoly Claimsjdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division cracks down on interlocking directoratesjdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Signals Impending Criminal Monopolization Casesjdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Brings First Criminal No-Poach Casejdsupra.com
DOJ Antitrust Division Announces Withdrawal of Information Sharing Safety Zonejdsupra.com
Activision Blizzard has five franchises lined up for its new Call of Duty esports leagueTechCrunch