freefornow
Member
MS' internal data and emails showed the probability and ability to withhold CoD. They ran those numbers internally. People from MS ran the numbers for CoD foreclosure and said the numbers looked good. I'm not sure what more the Judge wanted to show the 'probability'.
"Fifth, there are no internal documents, emails, or chats contradicting Microsoft's stated intent not to make Call of Duty exclusive to Xbox consoles. Despite the completion of extensive discovery in the FTC administrative proceeding, including production of nearly 1 million documents and 30 depositions, the FTC has not identified a single document which contradicts Microsoft's publicly-stated commitment to make Call of Duty available on PlayStation (and Nintendo Switch). (RX5056 (Carlton Report at ¶ 127.) The public commitment to keep Call of Duty multiplatform, and the absence of any documents contradicting those words, strongly suggests the combined firm probably will not withhold Call of Duty from PlayStation."(1) has the ability to withhold Call of Duty
Yes. Microsoft is more than capable of making Call of Duty exclusive, either directly, or indirectly through GamePass subsidy.
(2) has the incentive to withhold Call of Duty from its rivals
Yes. Microsoft has the incentive to withhold Call of Duty from it's rivals. "They can spend Sony out of business". That's a long-term strategy that they undoubtedly would love to see, and they have more than capable financial means of doing so as long as the regulators play softball. Making Bethesda games exclusive is also extremely financially unsound from a P/L standpoint, given Playstation is one of their primary consumer bases, and yet they managed to do it anyway.
(3) competition would probably be substantially lessened as a result of the withholding.
Yes. Foreclosing on CoD from Playstation, either directly or indirectly through GamePass, would lessen competition because it has a seismic shift to competing third parties in the marketplace that now not only have to compete against the #1 title every year with Call of Duty, but must do so in a way where they are at significant pricing disadvantage.
So, the reasoning is all sound that the Activision aquisition is anti-competition and bad for the consumers over the long-term. Making statements under oath that cannot be held-long term since the individuals making them will be long gone is not sufficient when you have an absolute MOUNTAIN of evidence showing a consistent behavior of foreclosure, desire to foreclose, and a desire to eliminate their primary competition from the marketplace through aggressive financial means their competitors have no ability to match.
Not a single piece of evidence provided to allow Corley to rule a different way.
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