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Developer of Apps Popular with Children Agrees to Settle FTC Allegations It Illegally Collected Kids’ Data without Parental Consent
Statement of Chairman Joseph J. Simons Regarding HyperBeard, Inc.
Dissenting Statement of Commissioner Noah Joshua Phillips Regarding HyperBeard, Inc.
Swiss Digital Game Developer Settles FTC Allegations that it Falsely Claimed it was a Member of COPPA Safe Harbor Program
Statement of Commissioner Rohit Chopra Regarding Miniclip and the COPPA Safe Harbors
FTC to Hold Workshop Examining Online Event Ticket Sales
FTC Releases Agenda for Workshop Examining Online Event Ticket Sales
Online Event Tickets Workshop
FTC Approves Final Order Imposing Conditions on Penn National Gaming, Inc.’s Acquisition of Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc.
Penn National Gaming and Pinnacle Entertainment, In the Matter of
The FTC required casino operators Penn National Gaming, Inc. and Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. to divest casino-related assets in three Midwestern cities to resolves charges that Penn’s $2.8 billion agreement to acquire Pinnacle likely would be anticompetitive. The complaint alleges that the proposed acquisition would harm competition for casino services in metropolitan St. Louis, Missouri; Kansas City, Missouri; and Cincinnati, Ohio. Casino services include gaming services such as slots and table games, as well as related lodging, entertainment, and food and beverage services, according to the complaint. Typically, casino operators generate the vast majority of their revenues from gaming. Casinos are highly regulated, with a limited number of licenses granted in any given state, as well as age restrictions on who can gamble. According to the complaint, the acquisition, if consummated, likely would eliminate direct competition between Penn and Pinnacle, increasing the likelihood that Penn would unilaterally exercise market power, and lead to higher prices and reduced quality for consumers of casino services.
FTC Announces New Date for Workshop Examining Online Event Ticket Sales
FTC to Hold Workshop Examining Online Event Ticket Sales
FTC Requires Casino Operators Penn National Gaming, Inc. and Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. to Divest Assets in Three Midwestern Cities as a Condition of Merger
FTC Seeks Comment on Proposed Modifications to Video Game Industry Self-Regulatory Program Approved under the COPPA Safe Harbor Program
Online Talent Search Company Settles FTC Allegations it Collected Children’s Information without Consent and Misled Consumers
DraftKings, Inc. / FanDuel Limited, In the Matter of
The FTC authorized legal action to block the merger of the two largest daily fantasy sports sites, DraftKings and FanDuel, alleging that the combined firm would control more than 90 percent of the U.S. market for paid daily fantasy sports contests. The FTC, jointly with the Offices of the Attorneys General in the State of California and the District of Columbia, filed a complaint in federal district court seeking a preliminary injunction to stop the deal and to maintain the status quo pending an administrative trial. The Commission also issued an administrative complaint alleging that the proposed merger violates Section 7 of the Clayton Act and Section 5 of the FTC Act by creating a single provider with by far the largest share of the market for paid daily fantasy sports contests in the United States.
On July 13, 2017, the parties abandoned the transaction, and the Commission dismissed the administrative complaint.
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