Apple’s Billion-dollar Antitrust Fine In France Cut To $366 Million

According to reports from Reuters and Bloomberg, a French appeals court reduced Apple’s antitrust penalties from €1.1 billion to €372 million (about $366 million), calling the initial penalty “disproportionate” and stating that the revised amount was “adequate” to deter the business from bad behavior. The French competition watchdog Autorité de la Concurrence, which accused Apple of distorting the retail market for its goods, imposed the fine in its original form in 2020.

The authority, which started looking into this in 2012, claimed that Apple had barred some shops from lowering the cost of its products and had agreed not to compete with two of its distributors. Additionally, it claimed that the corporation gave fewer iPads to some retailers than it did to its stores.

Apple’s Billion-dollar Antitrust Fine
Apple’s Billion-dollar Antitrust Fine

Autorité wants the fine to be “dissuasive,” whereas Apple believes it should be lower.

An unidentified Apple official told Reuters that the firm intended to revoke the reduction in the punishment because it feels that it shouldn’t be required to pay anything. After all, “the ruling pertains to actions from more than a decade ago.” Likewise, according to Virginie Guin, a spokesperson for Autorité, Bloomberg writes that the regulator is also thinking of appealing because it wants to “ensure the dissuasive aspect of our penalties, especially when it concerns market actors” of Apple’s scale. “What To Expect From The Google Pixel Launch Event?”

Apple is being sued for antitrust violations not only in France but also in the EU for its App Store restrictions and its unwillingness to allow third-party wallets to accept payments using the iPhone’s NFC technology. The Department of Justice is reportedly considering filing a case against the tech giant as well. In the US, there are multiple antitrust actions involving Apple that is now pending in the courts, including ones launched by Epic Games and the maker of Cydia.

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