• $ 1.7
  • € 1.7517
  • ₽ 1.7594
  • ₺ 0.0472
  • £ 2.1013

Evidence by late Steve Jobs to be used in music trial

Evidence by late Steve Jobs to be used in music trial
28.05.2020 23:03
Apple is heading to court to defend itself against allegations that it abused its dominant position in the digital music player market.

Individuals and businesses who brought the case argue that a 2006 update to digital music store iTunes unfairly blocked any device other than the iPod from accessing songs.

Apple has so far not commented on the case.

Video of late founder Steve Jobs will be used as evidence in the trial.

Emails sent by Mr Jobs are expected to be shown alongside the short deposition, filmed six months before he died.

The case, due to be heard in a Californian court later today, has dragged on for nearly a decade.

FairPlay code
Lawyers representing consumers and electronics retailers will claim that Apple used its iTunes software to force buyers to use iPods instead of rival devices between 2006 and 2009.

They will claim that shutting out other devices artificially inflated the price of iPods. They are seeking $350m (£222m) in damages, which will be automatically tripled under federal anti-trust laws.

Apple is likely to claim that the economic argument about inflated iPod prices is flawed. It will claim that its iPod prices were set without reference to rivals. In 2006, rival RealPlayer had less than 3% of the online music market.

Apple's iTunes store was launched in 2003. Songs sold through the online store were encoded with digital rights management (DRM) software to prevent unauthorised copying.

Known as FairPlay, the code meant that songs purchased from iTunes could not be played on competing devices such as Microsoft's Zune and Diamond Multimedia's Rio. It also meant that songs from rival online stores could not be played on iPods.

Attempts by rivals to introduce coding that would allow songs from other stores to be played on iPods were blocked by Apple.

The code was removed from iTunes in 2009.

The hardware giant has been embroiled in several legal wrangles over the last year.

In July, a New York federal judge found Apple liable over allegations that it colluded with publishers to drive up the price of e-books. It is currently appealing against the ruling.

In April, it was one of several tech firms that agreed to settle claims that they colluded to keep salaries lower by agreeing not to poach workers from rivals.

(BBC)

ANN.Az
Similar news
Similar news
China sent 280 container trains to Europe via Middle Corridor since early 2024
Business 16:09
China sent 280 container trains to Europe via Middle Corridor since early 2024
Azerbaijan and Ukraine explore avenues for deepening economic ties
Business 17:30
Azerbaijan and Ukraine explore avenues for deepening economic ties
Azerbaijan imports $900M worth of goods from Türkiye in 5 months
Business 13:30
Azerbaijan imports $900M worth of goods from Türkiye in 5 months
35 projects implemented in liberated territories of Azerbaijan in 2023
Business 16:00
35 projects implemented in liberated territories of Azerbaijan in 2023
Israeli companies invited to investment projects in Karabakh’s industrial parks
Business 18:30
Israeli companies invited to investment projects in Karabakh’s industrial parks
Italian firms interested in participating in projects to be implemented in Karabakh
Business 14:00
Italian firms interested in participating in projects to be implemented in Karabakh
Azerbaijani economy minister, governor of St. Petersburg mull enhancing joint activities in shipbuilding
Business 15:00
Azerbaijani economy minister, governor of St. Petersburg mull enhancing joint activities in shipbuilding
Russia-Azerbaijan trade reaches $4.4 billion, Russian ambassador says
Business 10:00
Russia-Azerbaijan trade reaches $4.4 billion, Russian ambassador says
Azerbaijan to increase value of non-oil exports to $5B by 2026
Business 14:00
Azerbaijan to increase value of non-oil exports to $5B by 2026
Anews TV

Our official Youtube channel

Subscribe