The Bork standard for anticompetitive behavior is that a company must have been able to raise prices because of it higher than they would be otherwise. Robert Bork argued that large corporations are relentlessly efficient (that's why they are so quick to lay people off). Price increases that are not fully justified by rising expenses will allow competitors to be able to grab more customers. So to prove anticompetitive behavior, you have to prove that prices are artificially high.
That's hard when the price is zero.
If you're a Chrome user, Google has just rolled out a new tracking system, called Topics, no longer relying on third-party cookies. The first time you use Chrome 115, you see something like this:
We’re launching new privacy features that give you more choice over the ads you see. Chrome notes topics of interest based on your recent browsing history. Also, sites you visit can determine what you like. Later, sites can ask for this information to show you personalized ads. You can choose which topics and sites are used to show you ads.
Sites can ask Chrome for information to help
personalize the ads you see. Chrome notes topics of interest based on your
recent browsing history.
Sites you visit can also determine what you like based on your activity on
the site. For example, if you visit a site that sells long-distance
running shoes, the site might decide that you’re interested in running
marathons. Later, a site you visit can ask for this information — either
your ad topics or ads suggested by sites you’ve visited. Chrome
auto-deletes topics and sites that suggest ads within 30 days. Or you can
block specific topics and sites you don’t like.
To measure the performance of an ad, limited types of data are shared between sites, such as the time of day an ad was shown to you.
Chrome, of course, tracks all the sites you visit (unless you switch to Firefox!). So when a site "asks Chrome" about your browsing history, there it is. Chrome doesn't supply lists of URLs, however; it sends the advertiser a list of "topics" in which you have expressed recent interest.
Once a site gets your Topics, it will probably use Google to place the ads you will see. This isn't necessarily a conflict, though.
Is this worse than cookie tracking? Is it bad enough to try to stop?
Chrome does let you turn this off. But if you're concerned about privacy, Firefox is probably a better bet.
(Ironically, that site wouldn't load at all using Firefox.)
Finished section in the notes on music sampling
Continue Transformative Use
pld.cs.luc.edu/courses/ethics/fall23o/mnotes/copyright_laws.html#transformative
Cariou v Prince
Google v Oracle
Authors Guild v Google
RIAA lawsuits