Los Angeles Times

Apple wary of disclosure in Google case

-

Apple Inc. and other technology companies said confidenti­al material they provided for the U. S. government’s antitrust probe of Alphabet Inc.’ s Google should not be shared with the search giant’s in- house lawyers because the informatio­n is too sensitive.

In a f iling Friday in federal court in Washington, Apple said it gave the U. S. Justice Department “competitiv­ely sensitive” documents and that allowing lawyers inside Google to see the informatio­n would result in “material harm” to Apple.

A similar joint filing was made by Amazon. com Inc., AT& T Inc., Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp., Comcast Corp., Sonos Inc., Duck Duck Go Inc. and T- Mobile US Inc.

Concerns about such disclosure­s have emerged since the government sued Google, alleging abuse of its power to thwart competitio­n. The Justice Department and Google have clashed over the extent of access to informatio­n collected by the government before it sued. The judge overseeing the case, Amit Mehta, has yet to rule on the issue.

The Justice Department has proposed allowing companies that provided infor

mation to designate their most sensitive documents as “highly confidenti­al,” which would prevent access by Google’s in- house lawyers, according to court papers. The U. S. argues that allowing the search giant to see the proprietar­y informatio­n would give Google even more power in the market.

Google pays Apple billions of dollars a year to make its search engine the default option on iPhones and other products, according to analyst estimates. In its court f iling, the iPhone

maker said the documents at issue relate to its negotiatio­ns with Google and other search engines and Apple’s internal deliberati­ons about those discussion­s.

“Disclosure of this informatio­n to Google would directly implicate future business dealings between Apple and Google, provide Google with a substantia­l advantage over Apple in negotiatio­ns, and potentiall­y disadvanta­ge competitor search engines that negotiate with Apple and other software providers,” it said.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? APPLE and other f irms want to block Google from having access to their materials in an antitrust probe.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press APPLE and other f irms want to block Google from having access to their materials in an antitrust probe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States