Apple, Amazon successfully fend off $600 million UK lawsuit over alleged ‘collusion’
A tribunal ruled Tuesday that Apple and Amazon successfully defended themselves against a mass lawsuit in Britain alleging collusion to remove resellers of new Apple products from Amazon’s platform.
Reuters:
The lawsuit was brought by consumer law academic Christine Riefa on behalf of around 36 million British consumers who had bought Apple or Beats products.
Riefa’s lawyers alleged that Apple and Amazon reached an agreement in 2018 to bar the vast majority of resellers of Apple and Beats-branded products from Amazon’s marketplace in the United Kingdom, reducing competition for those products.
Apple and Amazon said the case, valued at 494 million pounds ($602 million) plus interest, was without merit and asked the Competition Appeal Tribunal to refuse to let it proceed.
The tribunal ruled that the case could not continue because Riefa had not demonstrated “sufficient independence or robustness” to represent the claimant class, in relation to third-party funding for the litigation… The Competition Appeal Tribunal’s refusal to certify the case, an early step in such litigation, is unusual as the bar for certification is relatively low.
MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote in 2019, “Eliminating counterfeit Apple products on Amazon isn’t illegal.”
Apple has the right to vet Authorized Apple Resellers in order to maintain high levels of service.
Apple obviously wants as much uniformity in, and control of, the sales experience of their products as possible. — MacDailyNews, May 21, 2019
Please help support MacDailyNews — and enjoy subscriber-only articles, comments, chat, and more — by subscribing to our Substack: macdailynews.substack.com. Thank you!
Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon.
The post Apple, Amazon successfully fend off $600 million UK lawsuit over alleged ‘collusion’ appeared first on MacDailyNews.