Apple Agrees To $450 Million Ebook Antitrust Settlement 91
An anonymous reader writes: Last year, a U.S. District Judge ruled that Apple conspired with publishers to control ebook prices in violation of antitrust laws. Apple launched an appeal which has yet to conclude, but they've now agreed to a settlement. If the appeal verdict goes against Apple, they will be on the hook for $450 million, most of which will go to consumers. If they win the appeal, they'll still have to pay $70 million. $450 million is much more than the other publishers had to pay, but much less than the expected penalty from a damages trial set for August (and still only about one percent of Apple's annual profit).
Apple and Justice (Score:1)
Re:Fanbois (Score:4, Interesting)
the irony of course is that Amazon is the one that pushed the DOJ in the first place, and that an "independent" lawyer involved on the plaintiff's side does a lot of work for amazon and even works out of Amazon's building.
this whole ebooks trial is like DOJ partnering with M$ to crush OS/2. Welome to the monoculture, I hope your book industry shaped exclusively on five star reviews.
Re:Fanbois (Score:5, Insightful)
Sadly for you, the "facts" are on Amazon's side here. Apple was being legally outcompeted, and resorting to illegal collusion needs to be smacked down, regardless of how much they hated seeing their potential marketshare slipping away. Maybe they should have tried to compete by lowering prices further, rather than raising them? Would be a better outcome for consumers.
Re: (Score:1)
What I've always read is that the prices set by Apple and publishers were lower than the prices from Amazon.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm curious as to where you read that. My understanding is that book prices rose, by 30-50% [cnet.com].
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fanbois (Score:5, Informative)
Regardless of what you think of Amazon and them being a monopoly, Apple colluded with publishers to raise the price of ebooks. It was anti-competitive at it's core and it's illegal under US law. Not to even mention that it cost the average US buyer $5 per book.
The only joke was that it took them more than 5 years to sue over it because everyone buying ebooks at the time noticed the dramatic $5 price increase in all books. After the Apple deal there were many ebooks that cost MORE than the paper book.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fanbois (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Having done this twice, I can say that it's trickier than you'd think if you want to do anything but a long string of text. The tools for publishing ebooks are in the stone-age, and files still require a lot of manual tweaking (first time out I gave up on automated tools and wrote the entire thing by hand to the spec). Then you have the various rules of distributers and their buggy validators, which means the process can be very time-consuming.
Re: (Score:1)
Regardless of what you think of Amazon and them being a monopoly, Apple colluded with publishers to raise the price of ebooks. It was anti-competitive at it's core and it's illegal under US law. Not to even mention that it cost the average US buyer $5 per book.
Too bad (for your argument that is) that in reality ebook prices actually fell in all stores but Amazon. Even on Amazon, only those Amazon had sold below price rose in price. Provable fact.http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304355104579236261045331876 [wsj.com] (paywalled) http://www.salon.com/2014/01/12/amazons_bogus_anti_apple_crusade/ [salon.com]
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
the whole point of Apple's ebook efforts was to provide a bulwark against the Amazon Ultron-like eater-of-worlds mopolistic behavior.
It was replacing one monopoly with another, in fact the Apple case was worse because it was Apple setting the baseline price and forcing publishers to sell at or above that price, Amazon did not collude with publishers to create a cartel like Apple tried to do.
The Amazon situation is bad, but Apple's cartel was worse.
Re: (Score:3)
Damn right an Apple monopoly was the worse situation - I can read my Kindle books on Android, iOS, Windows Phone, Windows and a whole load of other platforms. Where can I read my Apple iBooks? Uhm... iOS.
Re: (Score:2)
the whole point of Apple's ebook efforts was to provide a bulwark against the Amazon Ultron-like eater-of-worlds mopolistic behavior.
It was replacing one monopoly with another, in fact the Apple case was worse because
... Apple was never anywhere near a monopoly - and that's obviously the worst kind of monopoly.
Re:Fanbois (Score:5, Insightful)
the whole point of Apple's ebook efforts was to provide a bulwark against the Amazon Ultron-like eater-of-worlds mopolistic behavior. It was a last ditch effort from apple and the publishers to try and prevent Amazon from eating and owning the entire author and book industry, from writing books to editing them to printing them to selling them.
so your whole argument is that it was okay for apple to commit a crime to thwart amazon from becoming more successful? if amazon ended up breaking laws, so be it, and let them stand accountable at that point.
apple isn't some angel coming down from on high to protect the poor little ebook authors. they were simply trying to thwart a competitor from becoming dominant in the field. they wanted a (larger) piece of the pie, and they broke the law trying to get it.
the irony of course is that Amazon is the one that pushed the DOJ in the first place, and that an "independent" lawyer involved on the plaintiff's side does a lot of work for amazon and even works out of Amazon's building.
i don't think you understand what irony means.
Re: (Score:2)
If Apple and publishers wanted to attack Amazon's monopoly position, there is a legal mechanism to do so. That they chose a mechanism that make them all an enormous amount of money should tell you something about whose side they're on, and it's not yours.
Re: (Score:2)
Fines don't mean anything to them! (Score:4, Insightful)
For a company which makes billions (and has probably made enough profit from this endeavour to justify the fine) fines like this mean nothing. Until people start getting jailed like normal people would do things like this will continue to happen. You can bet your ass if a CEO got 5 years in jail that company wouldn't set a single foot wrong after that for fear of it happening again.
Re: (Score:3)
You can bet your ass if a CEO got 5 years in jail that company wouldn't set a single foot wrong after that for fear of it happening again.
Many murderers spend less than 5 years in jail. If we start jailing managers for bad decisions, you would hear a giant sucking sound as company HQs headed overseas, taking all the management and administrative jobs with them. There is always someone advocating the "iron fist" version of justice, but history shows that it really doesn't work well. We used to execute people for stealing bread, but people still stole bread. Punishment should be fair and proportionate.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm going to have to go ahead and ask for a citation on that one, bro.
Re:Fines don't mean anything to them! (Score:4, Informative)
I'm going to have to go ahead and ask for a citation on that one, bro.
In 1987, the average time-served for 2nd degree murder in Florida was 6.8 years [state.fl.us]. That is more than five, but that is the average, so many murders served less time. Sentences are much more than that, but "time served" is, on average, only 60% of the original sentence, and in many cases, less than half. Plenty of other states have a reputation for more lenient sentencing than Florida, and more lenient parole boards.
Re:Fines don't mean anything to them! (Score:4, Interesting)
Do you know how to read a graph?
If you look at the page you link to, you will see that the 6,8 year average for second degree murder was twenty years ago. The average by 2003 climbed to 21,6 years and the average murderer close to 27 years.
Now, since your original statement was in the present tense I'm still going to have to go ahead and call bullshit. The average SECOND DEGREE murder convictee will spend 21.6 years in the joint as of 2003, and the sentences were on the rise at that time. With all the mandatory sentencing laws going around, I will bet you that the average is higher today, ten years later.
Also, remember we're talking about Florida. If you're white and you kill a black guy in Florida, and you pay a $25 fine and get two tickets to a Marlins game and a coupon for more ammo.
So, there's still no indication that "many murderer spend less than 5 years in jail". You wanna hit up the Google and take another shot at it? I've got nothing to do tonight.
Re: (Score:2)
That's an interesting definition of "many". Two examples. One of them "potential". And one in, wait for it...Portugal. Those add up to a very damning indictment of the US justice system.
"They're legion, I tell you, just so...many murderers getting out in less than five years!"
And wait a minute...what's this? Why wouldn't you count the nine months awaiting trail against your sentence? So, when I add all those up, and carry the one, and multiply by a million, I get a grand total of ZERO EXAMP
Yeah, that's what scares me (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
throw the CEO in jail, another one pops up in their place...
However, reduce the entire board of director's salaries to $100K a year for 5 years.....
Now they will think twice......
Also, the difference in their current salary and $100K does NOT stay in the company, it is divided up equally to all schools or something of that nature...
LMAO (Score:1, Insightful)
Yeah, much better to let Amazon to run all the book publishers out of business. :rolleyes:
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, the DOJ should totally prosecute the theoretical future anti-trust actions by Amazon, while ignoring the actual increase in prices brought about by market manipulation of Apple. :rolleyes.
Re: (Score:2)
Apple colluded with publishers to raise prices. Because of their action the average ebook increased in price $5. Everyone buying ebooks at the time noticed this overnight increase that priced many ebooks more expensive then the printed version.
Price collusion is illegal under US law. In many many way's it's worse than a monopoly.
Re: (Score:3)
Is there any evidence that Apple cared about the price?
No, but that misses the point. Apple wanted into the book market. The publishers wanted to break Amazon's hold on the market so they could jack the prices up. Thus the collusion began. Apple was a knowing participant in this collusion – that was their price of entry into the online book market.
Amazon using its market power to set prices is no a market failure......
I will point out that it was the publishers, not Amazon, which set the wholesale prices. When Amazon lowered its retail price below the wholesale price Amazon had to eat that loss. Which leads us too.
In what way is illegal price fixing worse than an illegal monopoly?
When custom
Hachette? (Score:3)
Yes, the DOJ should totally prosecute the theoretical future anti-trust actions by Amazon, while ignoring the actual increase in prices brought about by market manipulation of Apple. :rolleyes.
The future is here: http://www.slate.com/articles/... [slate.com]
Re: (Score:1)
Right? So what side are you on again? Amazon is selling books at 'full list price'...hmm, seems to me that Hatchet/publishers have an option, reduce the 'full list price' of the books Amazon is selling. Presumably it's within Amazon's contract rights to sell books up to the price (but no higher) that the publisher tells others they have to charge, why should Amazon charge less than that? Why does Amazon have to take 'pre-orders'? Why does Amazon have to promote a book at all? The only thing that struck me a
Re: (Score:2)
Re:LMAO (Score:4, Informative)
Setting aside Apple for the moment, there's nothing "theoretical" about Amazon engaging in actions of this sort. They've been doing it as long as Apple has, at least.
Using most favored nation clauses and the agency model, which is exactly what got Apple in trouble: http://www.selfpublishingrevie... [selfpublishingreview.com]
Leveraging their near-monopsony to try and gouge the publishers: http://www.teleread.com/ebooks... [teleread.com]
Making hard-to-implement immediate demands when the publishers pushed back: http://www.thepassivevoice.com... [thepassivevoice.com]
Delisting multiple publishers during re-negotiations: http://time.com/110412/amazon-... [time.com]
Jacking shipping times from a few days to 3-5 weeks: http://www.washingtonpost.com/... [washingtonpost.com]
The author's guild is outright accusing Amazon of violating the Sherman Antitrust Act: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/... [nytimes.com]
Spend 30 seconds Googling around. You'll be shocked at what all Amazon has already done when it comes to this industry, and it's only been getting worse in recent years. It's like looking inside the door at a sausage factory: you'd have wished you never looked.
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, there is a risk that Amazon may be so dominant that it can push up prices, but that is mostly a theoretical risk (smashwords excepted).
So, perhaps an investigation is warranted, but, in no way does that mean the Apple should not be fined for its actions.
Re: (Score:2)
By no means was I suggesting Amazon's actions absolve Apple of anything.
That said, you're only considering the one side of the market (i.e. whether they are abusing their near-monopoly), whereas I was addressing the other side of the market (i.e. whether they are abusing their near-monopsony). Just as it's illegal for a company to abuse their dominant position to force prices up since people lack alternative choices to purchase, so too is it illegal for a company to abuse their dominant position to force do
Re: (Score:3)
Technically, anti-trust cases ARE usually retroactive. And if they can compete with higher prices, more power to them. But I'm willing to bet right now Hachette would much rather have competition than be bent over by Amazon. The fact that Hachette did it to themselves (via their insistence on DRM) just makes the schadenfreude pie even more delicious.
Re: (Score:2)
And this is probably the second most important post of the whole thread, which shows you the other point of view of the whole problem.
Depending on how you view it, either Amazon are the bad guys, or Apple is.
Re: (Score:2)
That's impossible because that would mean all the flame wars and trolls are pointless.
Re: (Score:2)
When I got into a discussion including an author, I realized something.
There are no good guys in these disputes. The publishers do their best to rip off the authors. Amazon is trying to beat the publishers into submission so it can control the eBook industry. Apple et al. tried to set themselves up to not have to compete and thereby make lots of money.
Now, I do sympathize with the authors. They aren't in this fight. I don't sympathize with publishers, Amazon, or Apple on this.
Cost of doing business (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing I haven't seen addressed (and probably never will) is exactly how much money Apple was able to make from this. My guess is that they benefited far more than 450 million dollars from this. So if that is the case, why would they not do the same thing again since they came out ahead in the long run? You can't make the penalty less than what the company made by breaking the law, as it just becomes a cost of doing business at that point. If they don't get caught they make a boatload of money and if they do get caught they just make less money (but still make money).
Opportunity cost (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
They went from being a non existent player to being in dominant position going forward. They used the tactics to gain a massive foothold and now even with correct pricing they will still be benefiting from these tactics for many many years to come due to the marketshare they obtained. They will certainly have benefited exponentially more than 450 million in the long term from both hardware and ebook sales.
Re: (Score:1)
Your assumption is that Apple purposely "broke the law" in order to earn a defined profit. If you look objectively at what they did you could reasonably conclude they were just trying to enter a new market and take on a formidable competitor (Amazon) in a meaningful way. Maybe they did technically break a law (the judges think so) - but what they did was certainly not price fixing in the traditional sense. They happened to be negotiation a bunch of contracts regarding pricing at the same time because it wa
Re: (Score:2)
Dude, you might want to actually learn something about the case.
Re: (Score:3)
He's partially correct. A large part of the issue was that they were accused of colluding in this regard. Another part, however, was that they combined Most Favored Nation clauses and the Agency Model for doing business. Neither of those latter two are considered illegal, in and of themselves, but together with the each other and the collusion that was alleged (e.g. there's a story about the execs from the publishers and Apple all getting together at a boathouse to talk), they were considered a form of pric
Re:Cost of doing business (Score:4, Insightful)
My guess is that they benefited far more than 450 million dollars from this.
The entire eBooks market was only making $3 billion in revenue [digitalbookworld.com] in each of 2012 and 2013. And I think we'll all agree that the market of today is much larger than it was back in 2010, when Apple and the iPad entered the scene with their combination of an Agency Model and Most Favored Nation clauses, which were deemed to be anticompetitive when used together.
Apple's share of the market in 2010 was somewhere between 10% and 20% [the-digital-reader.com], depending on who you believe (most suggest it was 10%, but let's go with 20% for the sake of argument, since it'd mean they'd have made more money). So, if we use 2012's numbers (which, again, will be larger than 2010's actual numbers), their revenue would have only been $600 million at most during that time. I'll admit that I am not an accountant, so I may be misusing these numbers, but as I understand it, their 30% cut for the agency model would be taken out of the $600 million, meaning they'd receive roughly $180 million in a year.
To say the least, you'd have a hard time making the case that the $180 million they made was somehow $450 million or more greater than the amount they'd have made had they not engaged in anticompetitive practices. Though, if I recall correctly, treble damages were being pursued, so that may explain a large chunk of the discrepancy. Even so, it is highly doubtful Apple benefitted by anywhere even in the ballpark of the amount they are being fined.
Re: (Score:3)
Fine them the same as infringement cases... (Score:3, Insightful)
So what does that come out to?
They sell something like 800 million books a year:
http://www.digitalbookworld.co... [digitalbookworld.com]
Multiple that by 9,000 per infringement:
http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2012/... [wsj.com]
A conservative estimate would have them owing:
7,200,000,000,000
Or if you don't want to count the 0's: 7.2 trillion dollars.
I think they should fork over the 7.2 trillion; that'll teach them a lesson.
Jobs' aggressiveness (Score:4, Insightful)
It appears that one key to Apple's rocketing "success" under Jobs was that he knew he was dying soon and burned bridges left and right in order to grab as much early-mover market-share as possible to gain leveraging power for Apple.
People couldn't blame his bad moves on Apple itself because the dude behind it would be worm-bait when it all came out such that the reputation of the company wouldn't take such a huge hit. He was a voluntary shock-absorber.
We also have the employee "poaching" situation in addition to this Ebook move. I bet more will come out someday.
One has to give Jobs credit for using every weapon at his disposal, including death. His slimebaggery was masterful chess (except maybe for ignoring doctors).
Re:Jobs' aggressiveness (Score:5, Interesting)
I read the Isaacson biography, and it was pretty clear that money was NOT Job's main motivator; it was a means to an end to him. He really wanted to build "insanely great" things and see his ideas transform the future.
He almost went broke in some cases by funneling his own money into projects. Somebody who values money wouldn't part with it that long for a gamble.
He was driven to see his concepts turn into products people wanted badly. In his mind, the future was his orchestra to conduct his way.
One can arguably compare him to great movie directors who drive those around them insane trying to put their vision on screen in careful detail. It gave us masterpieces like 'Odyssey 2001, but many of the project "minions" used up their Excedrin (or 60's equiv).
"Greed" is not quite the right word. "Obsession" is more like it. Maybe there is a word or phrase that means "obsession to the point of harming others"?
Perhaps in his mind, progress is more important than comfort, a kind of social darwinism where struggle for survival is a "necessary evil" to be a viable species. Or it may merely be narcissism, or a combo: those who don't aggressively scrape to be at the very top spot "deserve" to be stepped on: A+ or death.
Re: (Score:2)
Isaacson did not paint a rosy picture of Jobs. Isaacson's indirect conclusion was that Jobs was a complex personality that a displayed wide range of traits and emotions.
As far as him allegedly firing employees because he didn't like the way they looked, perhaps Isaacson couldn't substantiate the rumor and that's why he didn't included it (IIRC). But, there are plenty of OTHER stories of him being a jerk, including parking in the handicap zone with a bogus/missing license plate. (A joker employee put up a si
Re: (Score:1)
He had a "nose" for what consumers wanted. He sensed in the late 70's that the future was in GUI's even though they would be tricky to implement on the desktop hardware of the time.
He started the general translucent craze with the iMac, a look that spread to irons and electric toothbrushes. The "Daisy" iMac was a true piece of industrial art.
He was involved in early Pixar, which sparked the whole 3D animation revolution with Toy Story.
The iPod found a co
Re: (Score:1)
Beethoven would probably likewise bop me in the face if I visited him, but I'd still jump at the chance to meet him and see him work.
Re: (Score:2)
Jobs was doing drastic things from the time he returned to Apple, including slashing the number of Mac models, introducing the iMac, the iPod, the iPhone, and the iPad. He wasn't close to dying when the iMac came out, or the iPod. I really, really doubt that he timed his dick moves so that he could posthumously take blame off Apple.
Re: (Score:1)
I didn't say the dying angle was the entire reason for Apple's success, just a notable part of it. Most of his (known) Apple brush-ups with legal issues appear to come after he knew he was dying.
Break Them Up (Score:1)
Just like people called for with Microsoft a number of years back, Apple should be broken up into a content-providing company and a hardware manufacturer. Their eBook intiatives that are being scrutinized now were a clear attempt to tie up and monopolize the ebook industry. Fair play would dictate that the people calling for Microsoft to be 'broken up' should be calling for the same for Apple.
Then maybe I could run MacOS on my Acer.
Re: (Score:2)
Fair play indicates that monopolies should be broken up, not that all companies should be broken up. Note that MacOSX is something of a loss leader for Apple's hardware. Split it off from the hardware and (a) there will be no real interest in maintaining or improving it (OSes are expensive these days), and (b) Apple computers will sell a lot less.
Re: (Score:1)
If Apple split MacOSX off from the hardware, and opened it up, it would first kill off desktop Linux almost entirely, and then probably go for Microsoft in a big, big way.
It would also kill Apple's desktop hardware, but they do make some nice laptops that would survive. And if they maintained proper leadership of the MacOSX project, they could end up the head of a huge Open Source desktop market.
But Apple seems more interested in selling sugar water to kids (shiney consumer stuff) these days.