The Star Early Edition

Apple-Google anti-competitiv­e lawsuit goes viral

Case sparks new claims against other firms

- Joel Rosenblatt San Jose, California

EVIDENCE produced against Apple, Google and some Silicon Valley cohorts about an alleged conspiracy not to recruit each other’s employees has sparked new lawsuits claiming other tech and entertainm­ent companies engage in the same anticompet­itive conduct.

Pixar president Edwin Catmull acknowledg­ed the use of such agreements when he was questioned by lawyers for thousands of employees who sued his company, along with Apple, Google and four others, in 2011.

Catmull said he was trying to help the industry survive by stopping hiring raids, remarks that triggered complaints in the last three months against animation studios in California.

Likewise, a Google document revealed in the case from three years ago – the search engine owner’s 2007 “Restricted Hiring” and “Do Not Cold Call” lists of the companies it agreed not to recruit from – has resurfaced as key evidence in complaints brought in the last two months against Oracle, Microsoft and IAC/InterActiv­e Corporatio­n.

The new complaints come as Apple, Google, Intel and Adobe Systems face a trial over the original lawsuit in April with potential damages of $9 billion (R100bn) because they failed to win approval to settle the claims for $324.5 million.

The litigation was “mushroomin­g”, Orly Lobel, a law professor at the University of San Diego, said. “Once there’s a visible test case, you look around to see where else it’s happening, and the next cases are easier to put together.”

The Apple-Google case, in its novel applicatio­n of traditiona­l price-fixing claims to labour markets, was serving as a template for a new wave of group lawsuits, she said.

The newer cases are assigned to US District Judge Lucy H Koh, who issued a critical ruling last year allowing the original one to advance as a class action. In August she took the unusual step of rejecting the proposed settlement amount as too small, citing “ample evidence of an overarchin­g conspiracy”.

The first new complaint was filed a month later, naming DreamWorks Animation, Walt Disney and three of its units and two Sony units as defendants. Employees alleged that Steve Jobs helped establish the animation industry nopoaching pact in his role as cofounder of Pixar.

The 64 000 workers covered by the original case include software and hardware engineers, programmer­s and other technical staff. The newer cases include managers and digital artists.

Following a US Justice Department investigat­ion, Apple, Google, Intel, Adobe, Intuit and Pixar agreed in 2010 to end illegal fixing and suppressio­n of compensati­on.

Walt Disney’s Pixar and Lucasfilm, which agreed along with Intuit to settle the 2011 case for $20m last year, are the only firms being sued again.

The alleged conspiracy by the animation companies dates back to the mid-1980s, when George Lucas sold his computer division to Jobs, who had left his position as Apple’s chief executive and started Pixar.

The animation companies contend the new lawsuits are “belated attempts to spin off fresh litigation from a Department of Justice investigat­ion that began more than five years ago”, and never led to any government action against most of the employers being targeted, according to a court filing. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? A Google document revealed in the original case three years ago is being used as evidence. The search engine owner’s 2007 ‘Restricted Hiring’ and ‘Do Not Cold Call’ document lists companies it agreed not to recruit from.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG A Google document revealed in the original case three years ago is being used as evidence. The search engine owner’s 2007 ‘Restricted Hiring’ and ‘Do Not Cold Call’ document lists companies it agreed not to recruit from.

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