China Could Be Another Hurdle In MS Yahoo Bid 60
wattrlz points out a NYTimes piece on the clout China could soon wield on antitrust matters and the impact it could have on Microsoft's Yahoo bid. A new Chinese anti-monopoly law takes effect in August that will extend the nation's economic influence far beyond its borders. Nathan Bush, an antitrust law specialist in Beijing, said the law represents the ascendance of China "as another regulatory capital contending for influence with Brussels and Washington." The article makes it clear that no one knows how China will play its burgeoning antitrust influence — conciliatory or nationalistic.
I should pass a law that says.... (Score:3, Funny)
but if they succeed and I catch them, they get fined 100 x the amount.
Which country am I?
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China's Payback for UNOCAL (Score:2)
Notahurdle. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Why They Hate China
Well, you have to hate someone...
Need a global standard (Score:4, Interesting)
The trouble with all of this is that any organisation that deals internationally (ie have a web site visible globally) needs to check that it is compliant in all 195 countries in the world - both in terms of web-site/mail-order/dealing-with-customers/... and in terms of corporate governance [think accounts, anti-monopoly, reporting, ... legislation].
We could really do with agreed international standards - so that I know that if I am compliant by one set of rules that I can download/read/... then I am OK everywhere.
OK: it would be a long haul, but we could start with web sites & web trading. One size would not fit all, but if I could to choose from a half dozen or so standard terms and conditions that I could display/link on my web site (with standard/authorised translations into all languages) then: I would know where I stand as would my customers. Be honest: do you always read/understand the terms and conditions from every web site that you visit ? I have refused to deal with some places (eg ebay) because the T&Cs were too long/complicated.
The main people to loose would be charlatans and solicitors - neither of who I care much about; both are usually scum.
The chances of this coming to be in my lifetime are small. unfortunately.
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We could really do with agreed international standards - so that I know that if I am compliant by one set of rules that I can download/read/... then I am OK everywhere.
Haven't you realized by now that 99% of international standards/treaties are simply bad laws that can't be repealed? Internationalization usually means that the US/EU can basically tell whatever country they want to sign this or they might get no imports/exports like Cuba has. Good idea in theory however almost every international treaty/standard has somehow been screwed up with the exception of some standardizing done by the ISO.
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lol (Score:2)
Nobody knows, because it is impossible to know something before it has happened. But everyone can guess.
Unsure? (Score:2, Funny)
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Chinese ships sitting just offshore in international waters find your comment interesting...
http://www.cuttingedge.org/news/n1449.cfm [cuttingedge.org]
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I would rather have a somewhat "broken" free market than one that allows a misuse of monopolies. In the long run, no one benefits from monopolies other than the monopolist. I don't think societies benefit unless there is viable comptition.
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So, at what point does economic power won in a free market become a 'coercive interference'?
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You can't have a *free* market when you have protectionist laws on the books... either for or against competition. If you're going to regulate one aspect, you have to regulate them all.... or find a balance, which is what the US economy and governme
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My Question: What is the "free market"?
I think a little historical background on the traditional U.S. view of the political economy would be helpful at this time.
The following quote is from James Madison's Federalist Paper #10 -
"A landed interest, a manufacturing interest, a mercantile interest, a moneyed interest, with many lesser interests, grow up of necessity in civilized nations, and divide them into d
Oh the Irony! (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Oh the Irony! (Score:4, Insightful)
China, if you try to distribute pictures of the tank in Tiannamen Square, you're very quietly taken off to goodness-knows-where and disappear.
Does the US need improvement? Quite possibly. Is it "so much better"? You'd better believe it, pal!
Don't tell that to Murat Kurnaz (Score:2)
I also like this story:
http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/10/07/wwii-veteran-nazi-interrogators-denounced-bushs-torture-techniques/ [crooksandliars.com]
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What you will also find ironic is China is the only nation which the Walmarts have unions. Of course its the Communist Party Worker's Union, but a union nonetheless.
A better idea (Score:1, Insightful)
Perhaps the penalty for a violation of this law could be a boycott of their Olympics?
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Microsoft to China (Score:1)
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think again:
How Microsoft conquered China [cnn.com], Sanity check: How Microsoft beat Linux in China and what it means for freedom, justice, and the price of software [com.com]
Oh ? Good... (Score:2)
That's relatively good news. At first I read "China could soon wield on antimatter thrusts". That's a relief...
China should make a bid... (Score:2)
My guess would be .. (Score:2)
Initially conciliatory and ultimately nationalistic. China's government isn't "conciliatory" on much of anything else, so I fail to see why they would start now.
Any translators on Slashdot? (Score:2)
welcome! (Score:2)
all our base are belong to you.
That's an easy one! (Score:1, Troll)
Nationalistic. Next question?
Nonsense (Score:2)
Anyone got a non-login link? (Score:2)
Why do editors keep posting links to sites which require a login?
Cheers