DOJ versus Apple - iSue the iPhone

Apple Subpoenas Samsung in Escalating DOJ Antitrust Fight


Listen Later

Apple has turned to Samsung for help in its escalating antitrust battle with the US Department of Justice, filing a court request this week to access key internal documents from the South Korean tech giant. In a move under the Hague Evidence Convention, Apple asked a federal judge to compel Samsung Electronics in Korea to hand over business reports, market analyses, and data on its smartphones, smartwatches, and app store operations, after Samsung's US arm refused, saying the materials sit solely with the parent company.

This comes amid heated discovery fights in the DOJ's March 2024 lawsuit accusing Apple of monopolizing the smartphone market through restrictive App Store policies and iPhone ecosystem locks. The filing, first reported by 9to5Mac and picked up widely, highlights Apple's aggressive push for evidence to counter claims of anticompetitive practices. No specific DOJ or Apple executives were named in the latest papers, but the case remains under US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, who has a track record of mixed rulings in Apple's prior app store fights, like the Epic Games saga.

Winning these discovery battles could recharge the DOJ's momentum, legal observers note, potentially reviving broader antitrust probes into Big Tech app ecosystems. Apple sees no major wins or losses in the past few days, but the Samsung subpoena standoff underscores its defensive scramble. Analysts project a long road ahead, with trials possibly stretching into late 2026 or beyond, given appeals in similar cases.

For the industry, a DOJ victory might force Apple to loosen App Store fees—currently at 30 percent—and open iOS to rival stores, shaking up developers from game makers to cloud services. Broader ripples could hit rivals like Google and Samsung, easing pressures on their own stores while sparking innovation in payments and sideloading. A loss for the DOJ, though, would affirm Apple's "walled garden" as legal, preserving its trillion-dollar control but fueling calls for congressional fixes. Right now, it's all about who gets the documents first—Apple's betting on Samsung to bolster its side.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

DOJ versus Apple - iSue the iPhoneBy Inception Point Ai