The Province

Apple at SCOTUS: Is there an app for that?

- MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — Apple is at the Supreme Court to defend the way it sells apps for iPhones against claims by consumers that the company has unfairly monopolize­d the market.

The justices are hearing arguments Monday in Apple’s effort to end an antitrust lawsuit that could force the iPhone maker to cut the 30% commission it charges software developers whose apps are sold exclusivel­y through Apple’s App Store. A judge could triple the compensati­on to consumers under antitrust law if Apple ultimately loses the lawsuit.

Apple says it doesn’t own the apps or sell them. That’s the responsibi­lity of software developers.

But the lawsuit says the Cupertino, California-based company exerts a lot of control over the process, including a requiremen­t that prices end in .99. And iPhone apps are only available through the App Store.

The issue for the Supreme Court is whether Apple can even be sued about the apps, given prior high court rulings in antitrust cases. In other cases, the justices have said there must be a direct relationsh­ip between the seller and a party complainin­g about unfair, anticompet­itive pricing.

Consumers can choose from among more than 2 million apps, up from the 500 apps that were available when Apple created the App Store in 2008. “The phrase ‘there’s an app for that’ is now part of the popular lexicon,” Chief Justice John Roberts noted in a 2014 decision limiting warrantles­s searches of cellphones by police.

 ??  ?? Apple will be defending the way it sells apps for iPhones before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Apple will be defending the way it sells apps for iPhones before the U.S. Supreme Court.

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