Antitrust and Consumer Protection
Competition: VOLUME 34, NUMBER 1, FALL 2024
Content
- A Devil's Bargain?—the Competitive Birth and Fracturing of Nils For the Student Athlete
- Antitrust and Unfair Competition Law Section Executive Committee 2024-2025
- BEYOND MAGNUSON-MOSS AND KODAK—"RIGHT TO REPAIR" AS AN ANTITRUST ISSUE
- Does the Compelled-speech Doctrine Limit the Duty To Disclose Product Defects?
- Economic Evidence In Criminal Labor Cases
- EVOLVING OR RUNNING IN PLACE? EMPIRICAL APPROACHES TO "COMMON IMPACT" IN ANTITRUST CLASS ACTIONS
- Inside This Issue
- Masthead
- Table of Contents
- Trends In Non-compete Litigation and Enforcement
- AI AND ANTITRUST: "THE ALGORITHM MADE ME DO IT"
AI AND ANTITRUST: "THE ALGORITHM MADE ME DO IT"
By Robin Feldman1, Caroline A.Yuen
As the dawn of artificial intelligence ("AI") rises rapidly, competition authorities should contemplate the potential for hazy days ahead. Undoubtedly, AI’s already ubiquitous presence2 offers exciting possibilities, from enhancing efficiency,3 to leveling the playing field for non-native speakers,4 to enabling scientific discovery.5 Despite these breathtaking advancements, however, recent data from the Pew Research Center reveal
[Page 1]
that only 15% of adults surveyed were "more excited than concerned about the increasing use of AI in daily life," with 46% expressing "an equal mix of concern and excitement."6