Today on “Post Reports:” Why the Justice Department is going after Apple over green text bubbles. And what its lawsuit says about the Biden administration’s stance on Big Tech.
Read more:
Last week, the Justice Department – along with 16 state and district attorneys general – accused Apple of illegally wielding a monopoly over the smartphone market. The civil complaint alleges that the tech giant stifled competition with restrictive App Store terms and high fees.
“Apple has maintained monopoly power in the smartphone market, not simply by staying ahead of the competition on the merits, but by violating federal antitrust law,” U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said at a news conference Thursday.
Apple spokesman Fred Sainz said in a statement that the lawsuit is “wrong on the facts and the law” and that the company “will vigorously defend against it.”
Today on “Post Reports,” tech policy reporter Cristiano Lima-Strong breaks down the allegations and what they tell us about the government’s battles with Big Tech.
Today’s show was produced by Rennie Svirnovskiy, with help from Peter Bresnan. It was edited by Maggie Penman and mixed by Sean Carter.
How Taylor Swift became her own economy
A family taken by Hamas
The new House speaker is Mike Johnson. Who?
The Trump allies pleading guilty
Mexico’s migration challenge
Deep Reads: A trans woman’s journey to acceptance
How Lunchables ended up on school lunch trays
Will there ever be a new House speaker?
Searching for safety in Gaza
The threat of saltwater in the Mississippi River
The Wild West of off-brand Ozempic
The cost of India’s unbearable heat
Bracing for what comes next in the Israel-Gaza war
Introducing “The Empty Grave of Comrade Bishop”
The scars of Native American boarding schools
The “urban doom loop” could be coming to a city near you
Understanding the Israel-Hamas war
Deep Reads: Inside the unfolding recovery of the Fetterman family
It's Fat Bear Week. Yes, that's a thing.
A breakthrough in Tupac Shakur’s case – 27 years later
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Daily
The 7
Consider This from NPR
Today, Explained
WSJ Tech News Briefing