In Europe, just being a huge company
can trigger antitrust law violations, regardless of whether that bigness arose
through mergers and acquisitions or simple organic growth. In the United
States, just being huge is not violative of our parallel universe of antitrust
laws; as long as that bigness was not created by acquiring most of your
competitors, it’s how you use that bigness to unfair advantage or how you
collude (love that word) with others in your business space to control pricing
and business practices. We have mega-corporate structures that got that way
primarily by organic internal growth. Google. Facebook. Microsoft. Apple.
Europe is applying and amping up its
statutory and regulatory power, from its consumer online consent and privacy
legislation (the General Data Protection Regulation - GDPR) or its modification
of the “safe harbor,” for Web service providers under their new copyright
amendment, to applying its antitrust laws with those America biggies in their
crosshairs.
Until recently, big companies in the
United States have viewed antitrust laws as a minor potential annoyance. After
all, the Trump administration and most of its regulatory agencies have pretty
much implemented business wishes almost on demand and has appointed senior
administration officials to run agencies they had previously spent a lifetime
trying to destroy. The Environmental Protection Agency, all consumer protection
agencies, the FCC, the Department of Education, the Department of the Interior,
the Department of Commerce, the Department of Labor, the Federal Election
Commission, many federal investigatory and intelligence agencies, the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Health and Human
Services, the Department of Homeland Security, etc… a seemingly endless list.
But something very strange just
happened. At the U.S. Supreme Court, which was asked if an antitrust action
could proceed to trial or whether as a matter of law, companies that have grown
organically can still operate with relative freedom from antitrust risks
relating to their own products and services. It happened in a ruling by
conservative and recent court appointee, Brett Kavanaugh, and the four liberal
justices on the court. A very strange alignment.
You see, Apple believed that they had
an absolute right – as quality control gatekeepers and masters of their own
technology – to require developers of apps for their ubiquitous iPhones only to
access Apple iPhone users through Apple. They’re our phones, after all,
declared Apple. Did I mention the 30% commission that Apple required for such
apps to be made available (through their online App Store)? It just what most
American companies assumed was their right.
Apple swaggered into the court,
believing that every trend they were watching in American politics and economic
policy were on their side. And then the court used the “M” word – monopoly –
and Apple lost. The case will now be tried in the lower courts. Why did Apple
risk setting a terrible precedent for themselves? Because arrogance suggested
they could not lose?
“Dan Ives, equity analyst at Wedbush
Securities, said Apple’s store services had been key to the company’s growth.
Apple has seen net sales of its services, including the App Store, grow from
roughly $24 billion in 2016 to $37 billion in 2018… ‘This opens up Pandora’s
box,’ he said. ‘It’s never a good thing for a tech titan like Apple to be
walking into the Supreme Court with a ruling that could have implications for
the App Store for years to come. Especially with the dreaded M-word being used
— ‘monopoly.’ ’” Los Angeles Times, May 14th. Apple still believes
that it will prevail through a detailed economic analysis at the trial court
level, but wanna bet they now know that have to settle or take another big risk
on appeal?
What I see, between the lines, is the
twinkling of a recognition that antitrust laws, like the 1890 Sherman Act, need
to reflect the modern world, one where a corporation could rise to top ten
global size status in a matter of a decade or two… even without the benefit of
mergers and acquisitions. Despite cries from presidential candidates to break
up these tech biggies, our legal system not only tolerates bigness but also
encourages it… as long as the growth is primarily organic. With the
acceleration of change, the application of artificial intelligence and the
explosive power of a new technology, rapid mega-growth that used to be
generated only by mergers and acquisitions is now an inherent potential with
the advent of any new, multipurpose technology. And fast… really, really fast.
Look at the federal regulatory
scrutiny given to the recent Fox/Disney or the AT&T/WarnerMedia mergers.
None of that U.S. governmental scrutiny has ever been applied to a company that
got big through internal growth. Google. Facebook. Microsoft. Apple. “That
ruling potentially opens the way for similar lawsuits against other giant tech
platforms that have a business model similar to Apple’s, legal experts said.
“‘Today’s decision unquestionably
opens the door to consumer claims against a wide range of digital platforms
that use their market power to their advantage,’ said Deepak Gupta, a
Washington lawyer who represented the Open Markets Institute in the case. ‘Going
forward, this is going to be a significant ruling for the big platforms — from
Apple to Amazon.’
“Much of corporate America had joined
in support of Apple and argued that such broad antitrust claims should be
blocked at the starting gate. So did the Trump administration… The plaintiffs
in the case, Apple vs. Pepper, alleged that ‘Apple locks iPhone users into
buying only from Apple’ and takes a 30% commission on all app sales, Kavanaugh
noted. They argued that, as a result, apps cost more than they would if Apple
did not control the sales.
“‘Ever since Congress overwhelmingly
passed the Sherman Act of 1890, protecting consumers from monopoly prices has
been the central concern of antitrust. That is why we have antitrust law,’
Kavanaugh wrote. The consumers who sued ‘purchased apps directly from Apple,’
the jurist added. And the antitrust laws protect ‘any person’ who pays too much
because of an anti-competitive conspiracy. That is enough for the suit to
proceed, he said, even though it did not mean the plaintiffs would finally
prevail.
“If the plaintiffs do prevail, the
suit could lead to a huge verdict or settlement. The case potentially involves
an extraordinary number of plaintiffs, and Apple’s sales of services, including
the App Store, run to tens of billions of dollars a year.” LA Times. For the
first time, an American company is being labeled as a monopoly in connection
with controlling its own unique, propriety product line. Can this be viewed as
assessing liability for just plain being big? This is uuuuge!
As Congress is mired in hopeless
gridlock, we are increasingly forced into bending and squeezing modern realties
with dramatic changes to reflect obvious social and economic changes – the new
normal – into old statutes built in another era. Presidential executive orders,
obviously intended to substitute for legislation, have not only been mostly been
judicially rejected but have pushed that congressional gridlock to new levels
of dysfunction. Will new and very conservative court, suggesting a new period
of activism from the right, step into this void accordingly?
I’m Peter Dekom, and in cases far from our
daily headlines, new and very interesting directions grow!
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