Apple hit with iPhone antitrust lawsuit by US DOJ

The DOJ filed an antitrust lawsuit against Apple.

The US Department of Justice filed an antitrust lawsuit against Apple on Thursday.The suit accuses Apple of illegally abusing its monopoly power in the smartphone industry and stifling competition.It’s the latest move by US and EU regulators to stop what they deem anti-competitive tactics.

Apple just got hit with an antitrust lawsuit that accuses the iPhone maker of illegally maintaining a smartphone monopoly not by improving its own products — but by making rivals’ offerings worse.

The US Department of Justice and 16 attorneys general sued Apple on Thursday, saying the iPhone giant restricts competition from other companies by “delaying, degrading, or outright blocking” other technology in the smartphone market.

“For many years, Apple has built a dominant iPhone platform and ecosystem that has driven the company’s astronomical valuation,” the suit said. It has “repeatedly responded” to competitive threats by “making it harder or more expensive for its users and developers to leave than by making it more attractive for them to stay,” according to the DOJ’s complaint.

“Each step in Apple’s course of conduct built and reinforced the moat around its smartphone monopoly,” said the lawsuit, which was filed in the District of New Jersey.

It’s the latest swing by regulators in America and the EU to curb what they allege as Apple’s anti-competitive tactics, and the DOJ’s third attempt to sue Apple over allegations of anti-competitive behavior in the last 14 years, according to Bloomberg.

Apple is not just facing regulatory pressure in the US. In early March, the European Commission hit Apple with a nearly $2 billion fine for disallowing apps like Spotify to provide cheaper payment options outside the app store. In response, the company claimed in a public statement that regulators don’t have any “credible evidence of consumer harm.”

That comes as the EU moves to investigate Apple for its potential violation of the Digital Markets Act, which aims to allow fair competition in Europe’s digital market.

Companies, too, are pushing back against Apple’s payment scheme. On Wednesday, Meta, Microsoft, X, and Match Group joined Epic Games in the video game maker’s efforts to get Apple to open its App Store to external payment options, Bloomberg reported.

Thursday’s DOJ case is “about freeing smartphone markets from Apple’s anticompetitive and exclusionary conduct and restoring competition to lower smartphone prices for consumers, reducing fees for developers, and preserving innovation for the future,” the suit said.

Read the original article on Business Insider