Apple faces lawsuits from 16 states and the US DOJ for anti-competitive behavior

Apple

Apple is facing legal action from the US Department of Justice and sixteen US states for allegedly engaging in anti-competitive behavior aimed at preserving its hegemony in the smartphone industry.

The complainants in the case filed on Thursday claimed that Apple was pressuring users to stick with its products by making it harder for them to move to rival devices.

The lawsuit focuses in particular on the iPhone maker’s market share in the high-end smartphone market. It charges that the business is making it harder for people to move to the competitors. This covers items like as “contractual restrictions” and the lengthy vetting procedure the business has used for its App Store.  

The lawsuit’s complainants accused Apple of suppressing the competition and said the following:

“Apple has developed a dominant iPhone platform and ecosystem over many years, which has contributed to the Company’s extraordinarily high valuation.”

“However, it has long been recognized that cutting-edge apps, goods, and services, as well as disruptive technologies, pose a threat to Apple’s dominance by reducing user dependence on the iPhone and facilitating the transition to non-Apple smartphones.”

“Apple would meet competitive threats by imposing a series of shapeshifting rules and restrictions in its App Store guidelines and developer agreements that would allow Apple to extract higher fees, thwart innovation, offer a less secure or degraded user experience, and throttle competitive alternatives,” the statement reads. “Rather than respond to competitive threats by offering lower smartphone prices to consumers or better monetization for developers.”

“Among many other technologies, goods, and services, it has implemented this playbook on super apps, text messaging, smartwatches, and digital wallets.”

“Apple’s actions also hinder emerging paradigms that pose a challenge to Apple’s hegemony in the smartphone market, such as the cloud, which may enable consumers to take advantage of premium features on less expensive smartphones or become device agnostic in the first place.” 

The complainants further stated that Apple’s anticompetitive behavior affects financial services, fitness, gaming, social media, news media, entertainment, and other businesses in addition to limiting competition in the smartphone industry.

They pointed out that Apple is likely to expand and solidify its iPhone monopoly into other markets and economic sectors if its anticompetitive and exclusionary practices are not curbed.  

 

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