Letters: Return on Investment
August 17, 2025 - Amid a government-wide spending review, Canadians can’t afford cuts to the Competition Bureau,
Big Cloud’s dangerous drive to own the future of global technology development, and reporting uncovers Meta’s reckless approach to AI chatbot interactions with children.
Letters: Telecom Tussle
August 10, 2025 - Cabinet decides in favour of infrastructure sharing in regulatory fight between Bell and Telus, more evidence that algorithmic pricing models have the potential to coordinate at the expense of consumers, and Uber’s neglect of rider safety shows the cost of a business model based on rule breaking.
Letters: Invisible Agreements
August 3, 2025 - CAMP responds to the Competition Bureau’s study of algorithmic pricing, CAMP fellow Andrew Paulley lays out the importance of local competition amid tariff turmoil, and pay to play corruption in the Trump administration derails economic populist hopes.
Letters: Cloudy Conditions
July 27, 2025 - Microsoft admits that the sovereignty of foreign countries is secondary to the long arm of American cloud laws, Amazon hikes the price of basic goods as the e-commerce giant’s pricing power grows, and an AI action plan out of the White House with Big Tech’s fingerprints all over it.
Letters: Mountain Monopolists
July 20, 2025 - Competition Bureau abandons investigation into an alleged Rocky Mountain monopoly. CAMP's efforts to improve transparency in Canadian competition law cases, and new economic study finds that price discrimination could be costing consumers.
Letters: Pricing Power
July 13, 2025 - Canada’s Competition Bureau dives into Amazon’s influence over the prices you pay online, lawyers pat themselves on the back for another merger at the expense of Canadian farmers, and
Google takes its global PR push up north amid claims of “hot and heavy” competition.





