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Antitrust and digital platforms in competition law: Apple Inc. v. Pepper case

https://doi.org/10.47361/2542-0259-2020-4-24-52-59

Abstract

Digital platforms are getting more general because of growing the level of online commerce. As a result, courts and antimonopoly regulators around the entire world face with the issues of applying antitrust rules to digital platforms. And each time it raises a number of interesting questions from the practical and theoretical point of view. In antitrust cases it’s difficult to define the product and geographic boundaries of the market where digital platforms operate. In 2019 the US Supreme Court decide a case between a group of iPhone users and Apple Inc. iPhone users filed a lawsuit against Apple Inc. claiming that Apple had unlawfully monopolized market for the sale of apps by charging consumers higher than competitive prices. US Supreme Court’s judgment in Apple v Pepper is really crucial for competition law, indeed. During analyzing the case, the following questions arise. Whether the «App Store» is a digital platform or not? Whether the «App Store» is a product market or not? If the «App Store» is a product market, what way should we determine geographic boundaries of this market? However, US Supreme Court’s judgment in Apple v Pepper does not provide us with answers to these questions. Obviously, the court had good reasons for this. Let's analyze this judgment and try to find answers to the questions that the US Supreme Court left opened.

About the Author

A. O. Maslov
Kutafin Moscow State Law University
Russian Federation

Anton O. Maslov

Sadovaya-Kudrunskaya str., 9, Moscow, 125993



References

1. Konstantinos Stylianou. Apple v Pepper: the unintended fallout in Europe // Journal of Antitrust Enforcement, 2019. P. 1–9.

2. Clayton Antitrust Act and Sherman Antitrust Act — Antitrust Trade and Regulation — Antitrust Standing — Apple Inc. v. Pepper. P. 383—384 //https://harvardlawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/382-391_Online.pdf

3. Martin Mackowski, Rob McNary, Shaina Vinayek. Apple Inc. v. Pepper: Online App Stores Are Retailers, Whether or Not They Are Platforms/The Antitrust Source. August. 2019; Ryan M. Sandrock. Apple v. Pepper and the Future of the Direct Purchaser Enforcement Regime / Antitrust, Vol. 33, № 2, Spring 2019.

4. Lapo Filistrucchi. Market Definition in Multi-Sided Markets, 2018 // URL: https://one.oecd.org/document/DAF/COMP/WD(2017)27/FINAL/en/pdf (Дата обращения: 13.03.2019).

5. Michael G. McLellan. You Can’t Change Doctrines in Midstream: Apple v. Pepper, Private Antitrust Enforcement, and the Continuing Viability of Illinois Brick’s Indirect Purchaser Doctrine. P. 73. Antitrust. Vol. 34. № 1. 2019.


Review

For citations:


Maslov A.O. Antitrust and digital platforms in competition law: Apple Inc. v. Pepper case. Russian competition law and economy. 2020;(4):52-59. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.47361/2542-0259-2020-4-24-52-59

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ISSN 2542-0259 (Print)