Texas AG Looks Into Price Fixing Antitrust Questions Surrounding Ebooks
from the had-to-happen dept
As many of you surely know, earlier this year, there was a bit of a fight between publishers and Amazon over ebook pricing, which resulted in Amazon backing down from its "all ebooks at $9.99" policy, and publishers getting the ability to raise the price on ebooks. The whole thing seemed a bit odd, and smacked of price fixing and antitrust (potentially collusion). Apparently I wasn't the only one who thought so. Nastybutler77 points us to the news that the Attorney General in Texas is now investigating the issue. The theory is that it's an investigation into Apple's practices -- which could fit with the Justice Department's own investigation into potentially anti-competitive practices by Apple. But, I'm wondering why the focus isn't more on the book publishers. It used to be that retailers got to set their own pricing, and vendors requiring retailers to set a certain price violated price fixing laws. Recent case law has backed away from that concept, though I'm still not sure I understand why.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: antitrust, ebooks, price fixing, pricing, texas
Companies: amazon, apple
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When all else fails, screw the consumer.
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...wtf?
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Here is what probably happened, and is much more realistic. Apple wanted to sell ebooks on the ipad so it went to the publishers, the publishers decided that they could get a better deal from apple who isn't in the ebook market, so they came up with the publisher set pricing scheme. Once apple capitulated and before the ink was even dry, publishers then went and threatened the other retailers into accepting similar terms to the Apple deal. If other retailers didn't follow along it was no big loss to the publishers as Apple would be coming along in a couple months to sell product once their store got up and running. Amazon and the like got screwed because if they didn't accept similar deals the publishers would cut them completely out of the Ebook market and distribute through the only retailer who would give them terms they liked.
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Not retailers
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Re: Not retailers
Wouldn't that depend on the specific contract between amazon and the publishers, or are you saying that our broken legal system requires this?
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One can easily get their media elsewhere.
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Politicians have made it clear that if you don't sufficiently waste money on their campaign contributions they (or the federal agencies they appoint) will unfairly pursue your detriment or destruction. This is not how the legal system ought to work.
Yes, consumers/the public have ultimate voting power and that's the whole point of this discussion, to convince the public to vote out these bogus politicians and vote in more reasonable ones.
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