• @bamboo@lemm.ee
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    351 year ago

    Well you typically need standing in order to file a lawsuit, who would do it? Mozilla are probably the only ones. Why would this cause them to do it when past similar practices haven’t?

    • @pup_atlas@pawb.social
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      391 year ago

      Perhaps YouTube premium subscribers would have standing as a class action, since Google is materially worsening the experience of a paid product if you don’t use their browser

      • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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        -21 year ago

        I personally don’t think an argument like that would hold up. A company making its service worse in itself isn’t going to win court cases, and this is hardly the worst example of a tech company making its products worse unless you use more of their software.

        • @pup_atlas@pawb.social
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          51 year ago

          Perhaps not, but it’s not just the act of making the service worse, it’s doing so measurably to paying customers ONLY when using a competitors product. With those caveats, I think you could at least argue standing. Winning is a whole other battle.

      • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        On what standing though? Mozilla potentially has standing, and if the government finds that google is a monopoly, then the government could have standing, but nobody else.

    • @laurelraven@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 year ago

      Users affected by it, Mozilla, any other company that comes to support Mozilla, watchdog groups like the EFF…

      It can also be brought by attorneys general and governmental regulators, the FCC and FTC might have a bit to say about it…

      Antitrust suits aren’t civil cases, I don’t think, so “having standing” is a bit different

      I’m not a lawyer though so I could be way off base, but the antitrust cases I’ve been aware of I don’t think they were brought by companies but by government agencies