The Justice Department is closing in on what would be the most consequential federal antitrust lawsuit challenging Apple, which is the most valuable tech company in the world. If the lawsuit is filed, American regulators will have sued four of the biggest tech companies for monopolistic business practices in less than five years.
Between this and what Lina Khan’s been up to at the FTC it’s actually been looking really hopeful for antitrust lately.
Here’s a gift link you can edit into the URL in your post so everybody can access the article
Cool, thanks. I love how you can edit your posts like that on lemmy, I’m still not used to it!
As someone with ADHD that never proofreads before sending this feature alone make Lemmy so much better than Reddit.
Thanks for the gift!
You’re welcome. To be fair, I scrape the gift links from other sites to re-share here. Makes it possible to share essentially unlimited gift links.
Sue them!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The Justice Department is in the late stages of an investigation into Apple and could file a sweeping antitrust case taking aim at the company’s strategies to protect the dominance of the iPhone as soon as the first half of this year, said three people with knowledge of the matter.
The agency is focused on how Apple has used its control over its hardware and software to make it more difficult for consumers to ditch the company’s devices, as well as for rivals to compete, said the people, who spoke anonymously because the investigation was active.
The Justice Department is currently facing off against Google in two antitrust cases, focused on its search and ad tech businesses, while the Federal Trade Commission has sued Amazon and Meta for stifling competition.
This year, European regulators are expected to force Apple to accommodate app stores beyond its own under the Digital Markets Act, a law passed in 2022 to rein in tech giants.
When the Justice Department started its tech investigations in 2019, it prioritized its antitrust review of Google over Apple because it lacked the financial resources and personnel to fully evaluate both companies, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.
Executives at Beeper, a start-up that made iMessage available on Android phones, spoke with investigators about how Apple blocked it from making it possible to offer messaging across competing smartphone operating systems.
The original article contains 1,270 words, the summary contains 234 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Down with iMessage!!! The rise of the green bubble begins now.