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Issues |
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ECIS's
policy agenda is focused on advocating interoperability in the ICT
industry, and the actions it takes reflect this fact. The main focus
of ECIS' policy initiatives is thus naturally on its Interoperability
Policy, but recently it has also began to take steps in the antitrust
sphere to ensure that dominant undertakings are not able to abuse
their dominance by refusing others the right to interoperate with
their dominant product or software platform.
Interoperability Policy
ECIS has been a champion of interoperability for nearly two decades,
helping for example to push through the interoperability provision
of the Software Directive and to ensure that interoperability was
firmly on the agenda in the discussions over the proposed Directive
on Computer Implemented Inventions, which was finally put to rest
in July 2006 after the Members of the European Parliament rejected
it.
Antitrust Policy
In the ICT sector technology can give undertakings great market power.
If a single undertaking gains control over a standard commonly used
in the industry, there is a great risk that the undertaking will misuse
its power for its own benefit by excluding competitors from the market
by preventing them from fully utilising the standard. ECIS believes
that by protecting interoperability in the ICT industry, most such
antitrust issues can be avoided. Therefore antitrust agencies must
be vigilant in protecting consumers from dominant companies attempting
to monopolise markets by preventing others from interoperating with
its dominant products, thereby foreclosing all effective competition
from the market place to the detriment of consumers who had been accustomed
to having a choice. |
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