General

An Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple for Overcharging iPhone Apps

NewsGram Desk

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that an antitrust lawsuit against Apple can proceed. Consumers are suing the company, alleging Apple overcharges when downloading iPhone applications at the company's App Store.

Conservative Judge Brett Kavanaugh joined with the four liberal judges in the 5-4 decision, agreeing with the plaintiffs that the 30% commissions Apple charges violate federal antitrust laws. Consumers allege Apple has monopolized the market by requiring apps be sold only through their stores.

Apple is also under scrutiny by Dutch antitrust authorities over complaints about commissions in European markets. Pixabay

Apple argued it is just a conduit between app developers and customers and that it is the developers who set the prices.

ALSO READ: Jury Grants $2 Billion to Couple Claiming 'Glysophate' in Roundup Weed Killer Caused Cancer

"We're confident we will prevail when the facts are presented and that the App Store is not a monopoly by any metric," a company statement said. Apple is also under scrutiny by Dutch antitrust authorities over complaints about commissions in European markets. (VOA)

In the ‘Wild West’ of AI Chatbots, Subtle Biases Related to Race and Caste Often Go Unchecked

Future of Education with Neuro-Symbolic AI Agents in Self-Improving Adaptive Instructional Systems

Lower turkey costs set table for cheaper US Thanksgiving feast this year

Suicide bombing kills 12 Pakistan soldiers

Dark energy pushing our universe apart may not be what it seems, scientists say