Apple loses bid to dismiss DOJ’s  lawsuit alleging iPhone maker operating an illegal monopoly

Apple must face the Justice Department’s lawsuit accusing the iPhone maker of unlawfully dominating the US smartphone market, a judge ruled Monday.

US District Judge Julien Neals in Newark, NJ, denied Apple’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit accusing the company of using restrictions on third-party app and device developers to keep users from switching to competitors and unlawfully dominate the market.

The decision would allow the case to go forward in what could be a years-long fight for Apple against enforcers’ attempt to lower what they say are barriers to competition with Apple’s iPhone.


Two women looking at iPhones in an Apple store.
A judge denied Apple’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit accusing the company of using restrictions on third-party app and device developers to keep users from switching to competitors and unlawfully dominate the market. REUTERS

Sales of the world’s most popular smartphone totaled $201 billion in 2024. Apple introduced a new budget model iPhone in February with enhanced features priced at $170 more than its predecessor.

The lawsuit filed in March 2024 focuses on Apple’s restrictions and fees on app developers, and technical roadblocks to third-party devices and services — such as smart watches, digital wallets and messaging services — that would compete with its own.

DOJ, along with several states and Washington, DC, say the practices destroy competition and Apple should be blocked from continuing them.

Apple had argued that its limitations on third-party developers’ access to its technology were reasonable, and that forcing it to share technology with competitors would chill innovation.

The case is one of a series of US antitrust cases against Big Tech companies brought during the Biden and first Trump administrations.


Tim Cook speaking at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference.
Tim Cook’s Apple had argued that its limitations on third-party developers’ access to its technology were reasonable, and that forcing it to share technology with competitors would chill innovation. REUTERS

Facebook parent Meta Platforms and Amazon are facing lawsuits by antitrust enforcers alleging they illegally maintain monopolies, and Alphabet’s is facing two such lawsuits.

You May Also Like

Monday's Final Word

Closing the tabs … Calling for deaths of Jews is now…

Woman dies at Melbourne racetrack after being kicked by horse

Emergency services rushed to horse training facilities on Cemetery Road, at the…

I fled NYC for Florida — Sorry, Mamdani-fearing Democrats, we’re full!

Since Zohran Mamdani won last week’s Democratic primary and put himself in…

Accused predator, 26, who worked at twenty childcare centres charged with over 70 child sex offences

A 26-year-old man who worked at 20 childcare centres has been charged…