Apple asks U.S. judge to toss antitrust lawsuit
Late last week Apple asked a U.S. judge to dismiss a lawsuit by federal and state antitrust regulators accusing it of illegally monopolizing the smartphone market. Apple said the lawsuit, if successful, would see a judge redesigning the iPhone.
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The Justice Department, 19 states and Washington, D.C., accuse Apple of an illegal monopoly on smartphones maintained by imposing contractual restrictions on, and withholding critical access from, developers.
In a motion filed in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, Apple argued that putting reasonable limitations on third-party developers’ access to its technology did not amount to anti-competitive behavior, and forcing it to share technology with competitors would chill innovation.
“Endorsing such a theory would require courts to oversee product-design and policy choices in dynamic technical markets,” Apple said.
The Justice Department says that by hampering interoperability between the iPhone and third-party apps and devices, Apple locks users into its own products and harms competition in the market. But Apple argued that the lawsuit fails to raise any evidence that its practices harm competition or consumers, who it says plausibly switch to a competitor if they dislike what iPhone features.
Via: Reuters
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