I am no lawyer, but I don't think that is price fixing. As far as I know, a manufacturer can make 'no discount' rules for authorized dealer all day long. Price fixing is when competitors ban together to raise prices as a whole in a market segment.
You missed the point. The problem is not that Siglent dictates prices for its "authorzed" sellers, that's a contractual thing between them. The issue is that Siglent suppresses (or tries to suppress) "non-authorized" sellers who sell genuine Siglent kit. That is price fixing!
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Price+Fixing"Price Fixing
The agreement to inhibit price competition by raising, depressing, fixing, or stabilizing prices is the most serious example of a per se violation under the Sherman Act. Under the act, it is immaterial whether the fixed prices are set at a maximum price, a minimum price, the actual cost, or the fair market price. It is also immaterial under the law whether the fixed price is reasonable.
All horizontal and vertical price-fixing agreements are illegal per se. Horizontal price-fixing agreements include agreements among sellers to establish maximum or minimum prices on certain goods or services. This can also include competitors' changing their prices simultaneously in some circumstances. Also significant is the fact that horizontal price-fixing agreements may be direct or indirect and still be illegal. Thus, a promotion or discount that is tied closely to price cannot be raised, depressed, fixed, or stabilized, without a Sherman Act violation. Vertical price-fixing agreements include situations where a wholesaler mandates the minimum or maximum price at which retailers may sell certain products."The real problem with Siglents's behavior however is their attempt to suppress unwanted competition, again which is illegal.
That I am wondering to, as would have assume others that had the same happen would have been on this forum? They did mention Rigol on one scope model a few pages back.
Usually what happens is that companies buy people's silence, usually with some free goods if the victim is naive and can be made to believe that this is a simple mistake that never-ever will happen again, or in hard cash for those that see through the scam and need more convincing.
Yes, I suspect it's not illegal either.
And probably it's not illegal to ask a private company (ebay) to remove a listing for whatever reason. Ebay can chose to either comply or not.
Yes, it is illegal, and this is not how that works. Ebay doesn't take down listings for whatever reason. The only time they will take down a listing is when it violates ebay T&Cs (these are assessed internally, and often things go wrong with that, but that's a different story) or when it is illegal to sell the item (i.e. stolen or counterfeit), and for ebay to act on counterfeits you have to be the rights holder and have to sign an affidavit, which is a sworn stamenet of fact. Lying on an affidavit is perjury. That's a crime.
http://pages.ebay.com/help/tp/vero-rights-owner.html"If an item or listing infringes on your intellectual property rights, you can report the alleged infringement by submitting a Notice of Claimed Infringement (NOCI) to eBay's VeRO program...."
The NOCI looks like this, although ebay now uses an electronic version:
http://pics.ebay.com/aw/pics/pdf/us/help/community/NOCI1.pdfIt states:
"The information in this Notice of Claimed Infringement is accurate, and under penalty of perjury, I am authorized to act on behalf of the Intellectual Property Owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed. "This is pretty serious stuff.
DMCA is also a legal avenue to get stuff taken down from websites and places like ebay, but we are not sure if this is the case here?
No, it's got nothing to do with DCMA, or DCMA takedowns on websites like Youtube and such. This is a completely different matter. What Siglent did is an anti-trust violation, not a DCMA issue.
And again, is it actually illegal for Siglent to ask the seller to raise their price?
In the US, yes, it is, and it's not that they just asked to raise the prices, is it? They used a false counterfeit takedown to suppress a (what they saw as) competing offer from (again, what they saw as) "unauthorized" sellers. That is definitely illegal.
Siglent is free to put limitations on their own ("authorized") sellers who have a contractual relationship with Siglent. However, they are
not free to meddle with the sales of anyone else, be it individuals selling their used gear or businesses selling new (genuine) Siglent kit, as this is illegal.
Of course it all looks really bad for Siglent, and that's a different argument, but people stating emphatically that it's all totally illegal etc might very well be off the mark.
Only if you close your eyes, ignore all the facts at hand, and tell yourself that Siglent just made a poor mistake. I mean, they essentially admitted making a false counterfeit claim (perjury) to take down an ebay offer they felt was too cheap.
Just playing devils's advocate here.
Well, to be honest it does come across as a bit apologethic, but I can see that as a benefactor of Siglent largesse this situation also puts you in a difficult spot.