US Brings Case Against Apple, 5 Publishers Over E-Books
VOA News 조회 수 404 추천 수 0 2012.05.09 05:58:26
This is the VOA Special English Economics Report from http://voaspecialenglish.com | http://facebook.com/voalearningenglish
The United States
government says Apple and five book publishers illegally fixed prices of
e-books. Three publishers -- Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster --
agreed to a settlement announced April eleventh with the Justice Department. The
agreement says they must repay millions of dollars and stop giving Apple special
treatment. Attorney General Eric Holder said the department will continue to
take legal action against Apple and two additional leading publishers, MacMillan
and Penguin. He says Apple and the publishers conspired to increase the prices
that consumers pay for e-books. He said the Justice Department wants to make
sure Americans can buy e-books at a fair price. The department says Apple and
the five publishers made an illegal deal to set higher prices for electronic
books. Because of this, it says, Americans paid millions of dollars more than
they should have. The dispute centers on the influence of Amazon.com. The
Internet store had been selling e-books for nine dollars and ninety-nine cents.
But the government says Apple made a deal with the publishers two years ago as
it prepared to launch the iPad tablet computer. The deal guaranteed Apple thirty
percent of the money earned on each e-book sold. It also created a pricing model
that required stores to sell at a price set by the publishers and Apple. The
price was several dollars higher than the one offered by Amazon. Acting
Assistant Attorney General Sharis Pozen said when companies get together and
conspire to enter into agreements that eliminate price competition, it crosses
the line. "This kind of agreement is illegal and anticompetitive," she said. She
added that company officials -- including former Apple chief Steve Jobs -- knew
what they were doing at the time. The Justice Department case involves antitrust
laws, which aim to halt business methods that crush competition. Sixteen states
and Puerto Rico are also bringing their own case. Apple and British publishers
Macmillan and Penguin have decided to go to court rather than settle with the
Justice Department. Apple says the accusation made against it in the
department's lawsuit on April eleventh "is simply not true." It says the launch
of the iBookstore in twenty-ten supported competition and broke what it called
Amazon's "monopolistic grip on the publishing industry." For VOA Special
English, I'm Alex Villarreal. For more business news and other stories for
people learning English, go to voaspecialenglish.com. (Adapted from a radio
program broadcast 13Apr2012)
원문출처 : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSnPCenKE2E&feature=youtube_gdata