Apple guilty of e-books price fixing - Action News
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Apple guilty of e-books price fixing

A New York judge has ruled that Apple conspired with major publishers to raise electronic book prices higher than they otherwise should have been.

Apple guilty of price fixing

11 years ago
Duration 2:33
New York judge rules on conspiracy of e-book publishers and Apple

A New York judge has ruled that Apple conspired with major publishers to raise electronic book prices higher than they otherwise should have been.

Federal Court Judge Denise Cote rejected the argument presented by Apple's lawyer Orin Snyderthat a guilty verdict would set a "dangerous precedent."The judge concluded the company had indeed conspired with a half-dozenbook publishers when it got into the e-book market in 2010.

Among the accusations brought forth by the Department of Justice were that Apple's behaviour directly led to the end of Amazon.com's policy of selling e-books for $9.99.

"Apple did not want to compete with Amazon (or any other e-book retailer) on price," the rulingreads."And the publisher defendants wanted to end Amazons $9.99 pricing and increase significantly the prevailing price point for e-books."

"With a full appreciation of each others interests, Apple and the publisher defendants agreed to work together to eliminate retail price competition in the e-book market and raise the price of e-books above $9.99," the judge wrote.

In a statement, Apple spokesmanTom Neumayrsaid "Apple did not conspire to fix e-book pricing and we will continue to fight against these false accusations," he said. "We've done nothing wrong."

Neumayr added that the companybrought much-needed innovation and competition to thee-book space when it starting selling them three years ago.

Assistant Attorney General Bill Baer called the ruling "a victory for millions of consumers who choose to read books electronically."

The casewas filed last year against Apple and major book publishers, five of which have already settled with the government out of court.

The court will now decide on damages, but Apple is likely to appeal regardless.

With files from The Associated Press