United States Justice Department sues Apple for illegal monopoly over smartphones

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor


"The US Department of Justice and 16 state and district attorneys general accused Apple of operating an illegal monopoly in the smartphone market in a new antitrust lawsuit.

The DOJ and states are accusing Apple of driving up prices for consumers and developers at the expense of making users more reliant on its iPhones. It alleges that Apple “selectively” imposes contractual restrictions on developers and withholds critical ways of accessing the phone, according to a release.

“Apple exercises its monopoly power to extract more money from consumers, developers, content creators, artists, publishers, small businesses, and merchants, among others,” the DOJ wrote in a press release."

  • Disrupting “super apps” that encompass many different programs and could degrade “iOS stickiness” and make it easier for iPhone users to switch to competing devices
  • Blocking cloud-streaming apps for things like video games that would lower the need for superior hardware
  • Suppressing the quality of messaging between the iPhone platform and competing mobile platforms like Android
  • Limiting the functionality of third-party smartwatches with its iPhones and making it harder for Apple Watch users to switch from the iPhone due to compatibility issues
  • Blocking third-party developers from creating competing digital wallets with tap-to-pay functionality for the iPhone
 
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Tim Sweeney right now

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They did the same thing to Microsoft back in the day telling them to put a bunch of browsers on their platform. The next thing you know there's all kinds of back doors put in to spy on people.

You know this is just a shakedown for granting surveillance powers to the government through back doors.

The Monopoly happens not at Apple but it takes place at the app developer level and choosing not to build platform support to other operating systems.
 
Well, well, well, didn't think they would ever do it but here we are. This lawsuit won't go anywhere for a WHILE and it may not be successful but at least the government is doing its job finally. However you feel about iOS vs Android is besides the point. I have devices from both ecosystems and it pretty damn apparent how difficult to impossible Apple makes it to interact with their products.


U.S. Sues Apple, Accusing It of Maintaining an iPhone Monopoly

The Justice Department and 16 state attorneys general filed an antitrust lawsuit against Apple on Thursday, the federal government’s most significant challenge to the reach and influence of the company that has put iPhones in the hands of more than a billion people.

The government argued that Apple violated antitrust laws by preventing other companies from offering applications that compete with Apple products like its digital wallets, which could diminish the value of the iPhone. Apple’s policies hurt consumers and smaller companies that compete with some of Apple’s services, according to excerpts from the lawsuit released by the government, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.

“Each step in Apple’s course of conduct built and reinforced the moat around its smartphone monopoly,” the government said in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit caps years of regulatory scrutiny of Apple’s wildly popular suite of devices and services, which have fueled its growth into a nearly $2.75 trillion public company that was for years the most valuable on the planet. It takes direct aim at the iPhone, Apple’s most popular device and most powerful business, and attacks the way the company has turned the billions of smartphones it has sold since 2007 into the centerpiece of its empire.

By tightly controlling the user experience on iPhones and other devices, Apple has created what critics call an uneven playing field, where it grants its own products and services access to core features that it denies rivals. Over the years, it has limited finance companies’ access to the phone’s payment chip and Bluetooth trackers from tapping into its location-service feature. It’s also easier for users to connect Apple products, like smartwatches and laptops, to the iPhone than to those made by other manufacturers.

The company says this makes its iPhones more secure than other smartphones. But app developers and rival device makers say Apple uses its power to crush competition.

“This lawsuit threatens who we are and the principles that set Apple products apart in fiercely competitive markets,” an Apple spokeswoman said. “If successful, it would hinder our ability to create the kind of technology people expect from Apple — where hardware, software, and services intersect. It would also set a dangerous precedent, empowering government to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.”

Apple has effectively fought off other antitrust challenges. In a lawsuit over its App Store policies that Epic Games, the maker of Fortnite, brought in 2020, Apple persuaded the judge that customers could easily switch between its iPhone operating system and Google’s Android system. It has presented data showing that the reason few customers change phones is their loyalty to the iPhone.

It also has defended its business practices in the past by saying its “approach has always been to grow the pie” and “create more opportunities not just for our business, but for artists, creators, entrepreneurs and every ‘crazy one’ with a big idea.”

Every modern-day tech giant has now faced a major federal antitrust challenge. The Justice Department is also pursuing a case against Google’s search business and another focused on Google’s hold over advertising technology. The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit accusing Meta, which owns Facebook, of thwarting competition when it bought Instagram and WhatsApp and another accusing Amazon of abusing its power over online retail. The F.T.C. also tried unsuccessfully to block Microsoft from acquiring Activision Blizzard, the video game publisher.

The lawsuits reflect a push by the regulators to apply greater scrutiny to the companies’ roles as gatekeepers to commerce and communications. In 2019, under President Donald J. Trump, the agencies opened antitrust inquiries into Google, Meta, Amazon and Apple. The Biden administration has put even more energy behind the effort, appointing critics of the tech giants to lead both the F.T.C. and the antitrust division of the Department of Justice.

In Europe, regulators recently punished Apple for preventing music streaming competitors from communicating with users about promotions and options to upgrade their subscriptions, levying a 1.8 billion-euro fine. App makers have also appealed to the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm, to investigate claims that Apple is violating a new law requiring it to open iPhones to third-party app stores.

In South Korea and the Netherlands, the company is facing potential fines over the fees it charges app developers to use alternative payment processors. Other countries, including Britain, Australia and Japan, are considering rules that would undercut Apple’s grip on the app economy.

The Justice Department, which began its investigation into Apple in 2019, chose to build a broader and more ambitious case than any other regulator has brought against the company. Rather than narrowly focus on the App Store, as European regulators have, it focused on Apple’s entire ecosystem of products and services.

The lawsuit filed Thursday focuses on a group of practices that the government said Apple had used to shore up its dominance.

The company “undermines” the ability of iPhone users to message with owners of other types of smartphones, like those running the Android operating system, the government said. That divide — epitomized by the green bubbles that show an Android owner’s messages — sent a signal that other smartphones were lower quality than the iPhone, according to the lawsuit.


Apple has similarly made it difficult for the iPhone to work with smartwatches other than its own Apple Watch, the government argued. Once an iPhone user owns an Apple Watch it becomes far more costly for them to ditch the phone.

The government also said Apple had tried to maintain its monopoly by not allowing other companies to build their own digital wallets. Apple Wallet is the only app on the iPhone that can use the chip, known as the NFC, that allows a phone to tap-to-pay at checkout. Though Apple encourages banks and credit card companies to allow their products to work inside Apple Wallet, it blocks them from accessing the chip and creating their own wallets as alternatives for customers.

The government also said that Apple refuses to allow game streaming apps that could make the iPhone a less valuable piece of hardware or offer “super apps” that let users perform a variety of activities from one application.
 
Well, well, well, didn't think they would ever do it but here we are. This lawsuit won't go anywhere for a WHILE and it may not be successful but at least the government is doing its job finally. However you feel about iOS vs Android is besides the point. I have devices from both ecosystems and it pretty damn apparent how difficult to impossible Apple makes it to interact with their products.


U.S. Sues Apple, Accusing It of Maintaining an iPhone Monopoly

The Justice Department and 16 state attorneys general filed an antitrust lawsuit against Apple on Thursday, the federal government’s most significant challenge to the reach and influence of the company that has put iPhones in the hands of more than a billion people.

The government argued that Apple violated antitrust laws by preventing other companies from offering applications that compete with Apple products like its digital wallets, which could diminish the value of the iPhone. Apple’s policies hurt consumers and smaller companies that compete with some of Apple’s services, according to excerpts from the lawsuit released by the government, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.

“Each step in Apple’s course of conduct built and reinforced the moat around its smartphone monopoly,” the government said in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit caps years of regulatory scrutiny of Apple’s wildly popular suite of devices and services, which have fueled its growth into a nearly $2.75 trillion public company that was for years the most valuable on the planet. It takes direct aim at the iPhone, Apple’s most popular device and most powerful business, and attacks the way the company has turned the billions of smartphones it has sold since 2007 into the centerpiece of its empire.

By tightly controlling the user experience on iPhones and other devices, Apple has created what critics call an uneven playing field, where it grants its own products and services access to core features that it denies rivals. Over the years, it has limited finance companies’ access to the phone’s payment chip and Bluetooth trackers from tapping into its location-service feature. It’s also easier for users to connect Apple products, like smartwatches and laptops, to the iPhone than to those made by other manufacturers.

The company says this makes its iPhones more secure than other smartphones. But app developers and rival device makers say Apple uses its power to crush competition.

“This lawsuit threatens who we are and the principles that set Apple products apart in fiercely competitive markets,” an Apple spokeswoman said. “If successful, it would hinder our ability to create the kind of technology people expect from Apple — where hardware, software, and services intersect. It would also set a dangerous precedent, empowering government to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.”

Apple has effectively fought off other antitrust challenges. In a lawsuit over its App Store policies that Epic Games, the maker of Fortnite, brought in 2020, Apple persuaded the judge that customers could easily switch between its iPhone operating system and Google’s Android system. It has presented data showing that the reason few customers change phones is their loyalty to the iPhone.

It also has defended its business practices in the past by saying its “approach has always been to grow the pie” and “create more opportunities not just for our business, but for artists, creators, entrepreneurs and every ‘crazy one’ with a big idea.”

Every modern-day tech giant has now faced a major federal antitrust challenge. The Justice Department is also pursuing a case against Google’s search business and another focused on Google’s hold over advertising technology. The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit accusing Meta, which owns Facebook, of thwarting competition when it bought Instagram and WhatsApp and another accusing Amazon of abusing its power over online retail. The F.T.C. also tried unsuccessfully to block Microsoft from acquiring Activision Blizzard, the video game publisher.

The lawsuits reflect a push by the regulators to apply greater scrutiny to the companies’ roles as gatekeepers to commerce and communications. In 2019, under President Donald J. Trump, the agencies opened antitrust inquiries into Google, Meta, Amazon and Apple. The Biden administration has put even more energy behind the effort, appointing critics of the tech giants to lead both the F.T.C. and the antitrust division of the Department of Justice.

In Europe, regulators recently punished Apple for preventing music streaming competitors from communicating with users about promotions and options to upgrade their subscriptions, levying a 1.8 billion-euro fine. App makers have also appealed to the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm, to investigate claims that Apple is violating a new law requiring it to open iPhones to third-party app stores.

In South Korea and the Netherlands, the company is facing potential fines over the fees it charges app developers to use alternative payment processors. Other countries, including Britain, Australia and Japan, are considering rules that would undercut Apple’s grip on the app economy.

The Justice Department, which began its investigation into Apple in 2019, chose to build a broader and more ambitious case than any other regulator has brought against the company. Rather than narrowly focus on the App Store, as European regulators have, it focused on Apple’s entire ecosystem of products and services.

The lawsuit filed Thursday focuses on a group of practices that the government said Apple had used to shore up its dominance.

The company “undermines” the ability of iPhone users to message with owners of other types of smartphones, like those running the Android operating system, the government said. That divide — epitomized by the green bubbles that show an Android owner’s messages — sent a signal that other smartphones were lower quality than the iPhone, according to the lawsuit.


Apple has similarly made it difficult for the iPhone to work with smartwatches other than its own Apple Watch, the government argued. Once an iPhone user owns an Apple Watch it becomes far more costly for them to ditch the phone.

The government also said Apple had tried to maintain its monopoly by not allowing other companies to build their own digital wallets. Apple Wallet is the only app on the iPhone that can use the chip, known as the NFC, that allows a phone to tap-to-pay at checkout. Though Apple encourages banks and credit card companies to allow their products to work inside Apple Wallet, it blocks them from accessing the chip and creating their own wallets as alternatives for customers.

The government also said that Apple refuses to allow game streaming apps that could make the iPhone a less valuable piece of hardware or offer “super apps” that let users perform a variety of activities from one application.
Decades late, guess Apple stop paying them government officials :idea:
 
Apple busted up CPU monopoly using ARM chips. Microsoft is also using ARM chips plus AMD. Instead of filing anti-trust/surveillance shakedowns of the private sector they need to force these companies to do this.

I would go after all the app developers and make them write code for at least four smartphone OS.

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Listen, Apple is not really monopolizing the market when it comes to phones, but when it comes to that I-watch that’s a whole other ball game. The iPhone has hit a wall over the last few years. There is no new groundbreaking discovery with these phones anymore. They are still good because I have one but still it is not what it used to be.
 
Listen, Apple is not really monopolizing the market when it comes to phones, but when it comes to that I-watch that’s a whole other ball game. The iPhone has hit a wall over the last few years. There is no new groundbreaking discovery with these phones anymore. They are still good because I have one but still it is not what it used to be.

Bullshit, they absolutely are.

They go out of their way to make their products extremely restrictive in order to make users completely reliant on them which enables them to continually charge (or overcharge to be honest) for additional products while also purposely making interactions with other, non-Apple devices extremely difficult and damn near impossible.

I honestly think the Android vs. Apple arguments (as far as which is better) that customers have is dumb so this isn't an anti-Apple, pro-Samsung or Android argument.

But in my experience Apple has engaged in these practices for years unchecked going back to the Ipod days so I'm glad to finally see some action.
 
Bullshit, they absolutely are.

They go out of their way to make their products extremely restrictive in order to make users completely reliant on them which enables them to continually charge (or overcharge to be honest) for additional products while also purposely making interactions with other, non-Apple devices extremely difficult and damn near impossible.

I honestly think the Android vs. Apple arguments (as far as which is better) that customers have is dumb so this isn't an anti-Apple, pro-Samsung or Android argument.

But in my experience Apple has engaged in these practices for years unchecked going back to the Ipod days so I'm glad to finally see some action.
Listen, I’m not going to put up a strong rebuttal to your comment.
 
Bullshit, they absolutely are.

They go out of their way to make their products extremely restrictive in order to make users completely reliant on them which enables them to continually charge (or overcharge to be honest) for additional products while also purposely making interactions with other, non-Apple devices extremely difficult and damn near impossible.

I honestly think the Android vs. Apple arguments (as far as which is better) that customers have is dumb so this isn't an anti-Apple, pro-Samsung or Android argument.

But in my experience Apple has engaged in these practices for years unchecked going back to the Ipod days so I'm glad to finally see some action.

Simple as this. This is bigger than petty squabbles about OS.
 
They did the same thing to Microsoft back in the day telling them to put a bunch of browsers on their platform. The next thing you know there's all kinds of back doors put in to spy on people.

You know this is just a shakedown for granting surveillance powers to the government through back doors.

The Monopoly happens not at Apple but it takes place at the app developer level and choosing not to build platform support to other operating systems.
That's not the reason for the spyware and hacks. Windows was a POS OS, especially with questionable technology like ActiveX and VBA for applications. Microsoft was found guilty for good reason. They ruined the software industry, and if not for Google and the cloud, your options would be far more limited than they are now. I've been in IT professionally for almost four decades, not to mention my time as a hobbyist. I had a front-row seat to all the bullshit.
 
All you have to do it not buy anything apple and you'll have no problems with them.How hard is that to do?

A lot of people buy apple products cause it's a status to own such items as childish as that sounds it's a fact;I own all of these apple products and I am some body
 
I've been saying this for years now. Apple plays their customers and they don't even realize it. Plus apple makes it hard to share quality material with non apple products. Apple has been on their bullshit for long enough. It's about time someone got in their ass about this.
 
browser_choice_screen.jpg


This is the street theatre the DOJ was peddling to make it look like it was doing something back in the day about having one choice. The DOJ lets these companies become monopolies to make it easier to spy like Google or do censorship. We need the hardware vendors writing drivers for platforms like Linux such as Nvidia, ATI, graphics cards, sound card, network...

I retract my earlier statement, Apple antitrust is street theatre, I think Apple based on my sources has backdoors, especially with their Pegasus spyware.


They even went after the richest man on the planet Jeff Bezos with no fucks given.
 
Listen, I’m not going to put up a strong rebuttal to your comment.

Because there really isn't one, and why would you feel the need to "put up a strong rebuttal" on behalf of a 3 trillion dollar company (or any of these billion dollar companies) that clearly have business practices which not only negatively effect their competitors but us as consumers.

I prefer Samsung/Android but in no way feel an allegiance to them so if they are/were doing the same thing they should get the same treatment.

Fuck all of this goofy choosing sides and pledging allegiance to these billion/trillion dollar businesses while riding on their competitors.

This isn't Bloods vs Crips so we need to stop allowing ourselves to be used and manipulated by these companies.
 
Because there really isn't one, and why would you feel the need to "put up a strong rebuttal" on behalf of a 3 trillion dollar company (or any of these billion dollar companies) that clearly have business practices which not only negatively effect their competitors but us as consumers.

I prefer Samsung/Android but in no way feel an allegiance to them so if they are/were doing the same thing they should get the same treatment.

Fuck all of this goofy choosing sides and pledging allegiance to these billion/trillion dollar businesses while riding on their competitors.

This isn't Bloods vs Crips so we need to stop allowing ourselves to be used and manipulated by these companies.
Hey, I said I was going to put up a rebuttal so calm down
 
I've been saying this for years now. Apple plays their customers and they don't even realize it. Plus apple makes it hard to share quality material with non apple products. Apple has been on their bullshit for long enough. It's about time someone got in their ass about this.
other than my macbook........i dont fuck with anything else Apple related.
Android for life.
 
All you have to do it not buy anything apple and you'll have no problems with them.How hard is that to do?

A lot of people buy apple products cause it's a status to own such items as childish as that sounds it's a fact;I own all of these apple products and I am some body

This isn't accurate though.

I haven't had an Apple phone in years but since a lot if friends and family do I'm constantly adversely affected by their practices which intentionally restricts (or makes difficult to a degree) communication with other devices.

Just as important, and a big reason for this lawsuit, is the fact that these tactics prohibits/hinders their customers from utilizing other services which forces the customer to spend with them (sometimes at an unreasonably higher price) while simultaneously damaging any potential business competition.
 
This isn't accurate though.

I haven't had an Apple phone in years but since a lot if friends and family do I'm constantly adversely affected by their practices which intentionally restricts (or makes difficult to a degree) communication with other devices.

Just as important, and a big reason for this lawsuit, is the fact that these tactics prohibits/hinders their customers from utilizing other services which forces the customer to spend with them (sometimes at an unreasonably higher price) while simultaneously damaging any potential business competition.
Good luck with your case......Make the other jailhouse lawyers proud in the name of fukkApples.
 
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Here is more Street theater using virtual machines to put competing operating systems on Windows. Another one is not charging a price for the operating system now and recovering the money through overcharging on the Office 365, using advertising revenue, or cloud. If you try to install Linux directly you would have all kinds of issues or problems with the drivers.

I would rather have three or four operating system choices then browser choices with one operating system which the DOJ is scamming us with.
 
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"The US Department of Justice and 16 state and district attorneys general accused Apple of operating an illegal monopoly in the smartphone market in a new antitrust lawsuit.

The DOJ and states are accusing Apple of driving up prices for consumers and developers at the expense of making users more reliant on its iPhones. It alleges that Apple “selectively” imposes contractual restrictions on developers and withholds critical ways of accessing the phone, according to a release.

“Apple exercises its monopoly power to extract more money from consumers, developers, content creators, artists, publishers, small businesses, and merchants, among others,” the DOJ wrote in a press release."

  • Disrupting “super apps” that encompass many different programs and could degrade “iOS stickiness” and make it easier for iPhone users to switch to competing devices
  • Blocking cloud-streaming apps for things like video games that would lower the need for superior hardware
  • Suppressing the quality of messaging between the iPhone platform and competing mobile platforms like Android
  • Limiting the functionality of third-party smartwatches with its iPhones and making it harder for Apple Watch users to switch from the iPhone due to compatibility issues
  • Blocking third-party developers from creating competing digital wallets with tap-to-pay functionality for the iPhone

I knew they were some assholes but I did not know they were bleeding, anal fissure infested, hemmoroidal, prolapsed anus assholes.

Damn!
 


"At Apple, we innovate every day to make technology people love—designing products that work seamlessly together, protect people's privacy and security, and create a magical experience for our users. This lawsuit threatens who we are and the principles that set Apple products apart in fiercely competitive markets. If successful, it would hinder our ability to create the kind of technology people expect from Apple—where hardware, software, and services intersect. It would also set a dangerous precedent, empowering government to take a heavy hand in designing people's technology. We believe this lawsuit is wrong on the facts and the law, and we will vigorously defend against it.:
 
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