Apple E-book Price-Fixing Trial Begins
An anonymous reader writes "Technology giant Apple is to begin its defence against charges by the US government that it tried to fix the prices of e-books. The iPad-maker is accused of working with publishers in 2009 to set prices in an effort to compete in the e-book market dominated by Amazon. Quotes from Steve Jobs' official biography have been cited as evidence in the case."
They set an artificial floor price through contracts that ensured they can't be undercut by the competition. Price fixing doesn't just refer to the actual price, it refers to setting/fixing of minimum or maximum prices in an industry as well.
Apple's iBook publishing deals included a clause that no other eBook outlet could get a better price than Apple. So, yes, they were engaged in price-fixing that directly favoured them as a seller. In a wholesale bookselling model that's not quite so terrible - you can compete by eating into your margins - but in an agency model where the selling price is set by the publisher isn't allowed to be any lower than on iBooks, you're fucked.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
Except that's not what's happening here. It's "I'll sell quantities at a higher price you choose at a fixed margin, but you can't sell via anyone else at a lower price or better margin". That's why it's anti-competitive; the new system they put in place prevents their retail competitors from ever competing on price. To me, that seems entirely unreasonable.
The case has nothing to do with that. Do you really think that going to a supplier and saying "I'll buy huge quantities at a reasonable price, but if you sell to someone else for less then I instead get that price" is in any way illegal or even unreasonable?
Apple didnt organize fixed wholesale pricing with publishers. They organized fixed retail pricing via publishers.
Not just illegal.. obviously illegal. The fact that you dont see that tells us something about you...
"His name was James Damore."
Would you leave it to companies like Apple or Google they could, like in this example, brute force their ways on smaller business partners.
When you don't trust your politicians, don't complain here but go voting.
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
For non-agency titles (in other words, titles that Amazon purchases to sell under the wholesale model,) Amazon reserves the right to set and change the price as it sees fit, although it will still remit the same wholesale amount back to the publisher or author. If Amazon drops its price for a title below that of Apple or Barnes & Noble, even without the knowledge of the publisher or author, Apple and Barnes & Noble have the right to match Amazon's price.
Read that through again. The blogger you are sourcing is misrepresenting what a "Most Favored Nation" agreement is. When a retailer, such as Amazon, buys a product at wholesale, either a book or a pipe fitting, they have the right to set whatever price they wish for that item. If they're cutting into their own profit that doesn't matter and is not illegal, the manufacturer/distributor/publisher was paid their asking price. This is not a MFN clause, it's standard retail practice. Apple's deal changed that. Retailers could no longer set their own prices. If they didn't charge the price the publishers demanded then they would not be sold any books, and several publishers did withhold books from Amazon until they agreed to their scheme. They could no longer use pricing as a competitive tool against Apple, which is why Apple is in court and not Amazon.
I can't believe I need to integrate these ideas for you, but here we go: because the publishers set the price in the agency model, and because all of the major publishers colluded to switch to an agency model simultaneously, and because Apple's deals mandated that Apple always receive the best available price, it was no longer possible for Amazon to ever sell an eBook at a price lower than that offered by Apple.
That is an illegal anticompetitive action that reduces competition.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?