Wall Street Journal
Apple’s App Store Under Fire in Supreme Court Case
Apple's exclusive market for selling iPhone apps came under fire at the Supreme Court, as justices considered whether consumers should be allowed to proceed with a lawsuit alleging the company has an illegal monopoly that produces higher prices. The plaintiffs are a group of consumers pursuing a class-action lawsuit seeking damages on behalf of people who have purchased iPhone apps. They argue that prices are higher than they would be in a competitive market because Apple requires that all software for its phones be sold and purchased through its App Store.
Washington Asks Allies to Drop Huawei
The US government has initiated an extraordinary outreach campaign to foreign allies, trying to persuade wireless and internet providers in these countries to avoid telecommunications equipment from China’s Huawei Technologies Co., apparently. American officials have briefed their government counterparts and telecom executives in friendly countries where Huawei equipment is already in wide use, including Germany, Italy and Japan, about what they see as cybersecurity risks.
Apple’s Deal With Google Is a Two-Way Street
Both companies have long preferred to be vague on the details of their arrangement in which Google pays Apple to be the default search engine on its Safari internet browser. Some $4 billion a year is the most conservative view among analysts who have taken a stab at estimating these payments.
Facebook’s Zuckerberg Says He Has No Plans to Step Down as Chairman; Calls COO Sandberg an ‘important partner’ (Wall Street Journal)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 11/21/2018 - 06:25Holman Jenkins: The Scapegoating of Facebook (Wall Street Journal)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 11/21/2018 - 06:24Outlook for Traditional TV Goes From Bad to Worse (Wall Street Journal)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 11/20/2018 - 06:32William McGurn: A CNN suit claiming a constitutional right to a press pass will inevitably backfire (Wall Street Journal)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 11/20/2018 - 06:30Zuckerberg gathered ~50 top lieutenants and told them that Facebook was at war, he planned to lead the company accordingly (Wall Street Journal)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 11/19/2018 - 06:21Once-Worthless Radio Waves Get New Life in Spectrum Auction
Cellphone carriers often call their most valuable radio-wave licenses “beachfront” property. As with real estate, it pays to be in a prime location. Government officials will test that thinking this month by selling some once-barren tracts of that virtual real estate in the upper reaches of the wireless spectrum. How much companies are willing to pay for them remains to be seen. The Federal Communications Commission began the first of two auctions for extremely high-frequency spectrum licenses, raising cash from a type of radio wave once considered useless for wireless service.