Antitrust Antitrust

Orange sees Paris appeal court quash SFR’s compensation over second-home connections

By Nicholas Hirst and Matthew Newman
  • 28 Sep 2021 05:15
  • 28 Sep 2021 05:15
Orange has seen French appeal judges annul a ruling that it must pay rival SFR more than 50 million euros for an antitrust abuse linked to Internet and phone connections to second homes.
The Paris Court of Appeal said SFR, France's second-largest telecom operator, should have pursued its concerns with

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Nicholas Hirst

Chief Correspondent


Nicholas covers EU merger review and antitrust investigations for Mlex in Brussels. He previously wrote about EU affairs for Politico Europe, European Voice and PaRR. After earning an LLM in European law from the College of Europe in Bruges, he spent a year working in the competition practice of a leading competition law firm in Brussels 2009-10. He graduated in modern European languages from Oxford University in 2006.

Matthew Newman

Chief Correspondent


Matthew Newman is a chief correspondent for MLex and writes about data protection, privacy, telecoms, cyber security and artificial intelligence. Matthew began his journalism career in 1991 in community newspapers. He worked as a reporter in Riga, Latvia in 1993 and then moved to Chicago where he covered local news. In 1995, he became a personal finance reporter for Dow Jones Newswires, and was then transferred to Brussels in 1999. He specialized in EU regulatory affairs, including trade and telecom issues. He began covering competition for Bloomberg News as an EU court reporter in 2004. In 2010, he was named spokesman for Viviane Reding, the EU’s justice commissioner. In January 2012, he helped launch the commission’s proposal to overall data protection rules.

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