Well,the e-book case that began in 2012 when the US government accused Apple of price-fixing finally ended yesterday when the Supreme Court declined to hear Apple’s appeal. That left the original ruling intact, meaning that Apple is officially guilty of anti-competitive behavior and will fill to fork out $450M in compensation.
There’s no doubt in my intellect that the right result was reached in law. Apple did deliberately set out to fix prices, or it did strike secret deals,and it did intend to manipulate the e-book market. Emails from Steve Jobs confirmed the government’s claim that Apple struck the deals in the belief that consumers would discontinuance up paying more for e-books.
Throw in with Apple and see if we can all obtain a depart of this to create a real mainstream ebooks market at $12.99 and $14.99. [Up from the typical $9.99 at the time.]
So far, so good.If you’d brought that evidence to me at the time Apple did the deals, or I’d fill agreed with the government that the company’s behavior was both illegal and morally wrong. But Id argue that by the time the case was finally brought to court,it was already abundantly clear that it was not in the public interest to pursue it … more…
Filed under: AAPL Company, Opinion Tagged: AAPL, and Amazon,Apple Inc, ebook trial, and ebooks,IBooks, Opinion, and Steve Jobs
Source: 9to5mac.com