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SanDisk subpoenaed in US antitrust probe14 Sep 2007 20:10 Canada, US courts want a piece tooCartels?By Svein Skogen
Posted Saturday 15th September 2007 01:13 GMT
Strange how they can attack this industry, yet turn a blind eye on the recording industry that has been price-fixing for YEARS and even admits so! I think that until the recording industry is up on charges for Organized Crime, every person living in that poor excuse of a democracy (it's a corporistic feudal society, really), should DAILY write their local law officials, and inform them that "you are not doing your job rounding up the criminals". //Svein Voting with what now?By Iamfanboy
Posted Saturday 15th September 2007 03:54 GMT
For years the corporate goons have been tricking us with the idea of thinking that we can "Vote with our wallets" instead of paying attention to the people we actually VOTE FOR, but now that notion is turning around and biting the music and movie cartels right in the arse. My friend predicted it nearly ten years ago with the advent of .mp3, and now all we have to do is wait and watch. Price fixing?By Anonymous Coward
Posted Sunday 16th September 2007 02:20 GMT
Perhaps the Canadian government (and others) could look into the ludicrous price fixing/gouging of the Oil Industry while they are at it (instead of coyly ignoring this as the tax dollars roll in). Evidence?By Charles Manning
Posted Monday 17th September 2007 01:23 GMT
Generally price fixing produces static l **high** prices. NAND prices have continued to drop at a huge rate since 2000 or so. NAND prices have dropped faster than any other computer related technology in history. Where's the price fixing in that? I'm with the others on this: OPEC is primarily a price fixing body and the rest of the industry dabbles in politics to keep its interests alive. Very little suprise that the dual Bush&Bush presidency spent most of their time in office manipulating the oil market. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbusto_Energy The period for commenting on this story has finished |
Breaking Hardware News
The heat rising from San Jose isn't merely an effect of a convention center full of GTX 280 cards being flipped on at once. Nvidia's decision to host its inaugural computing conference, Nvision 08, this week in the company's home town has fanned the flames of passion inside city officials.
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