What’s wrong with the U.S. DOJ?

“What should be the price of the paperless word, now that books are going digital in one of the most important transformations in history?” Wayne Crews asks for Forbes. “Only the Justice Department knows, it would seem.”

“The Antitrust Division has filed an antitrust suit against Apple and several publishers (Simon & Schuster, NewsCorp’s HarperCollins, Hachette, Pearson, PLC’s Penguin Group (USA) and Macmillan),” Crews writes. “The complaint seems to be that collusion and smoke-filled rooms paved the way to a deal by which Apple gets a 30 percent cut of the publishers’ eBooks sold for Apple devices, while other vendors are forbidden from selling below a pre-specified price.”

Crews writes, “Such ordinary business deals, you see, involve a now-disparaged free market instrument called a “contract” and may not be permitted. Details aren’t complete but this arrangement appears to have been a normal response to Amazon’s deep discounts of ebooks below physical book prices. Publishers likely feared Amazon’s increasing ebook pricing sway and its potential power to undermine physical book sales.”

Crews writes, “As Steve Jobs himself put it in the Walter Isaacson book, ‘We’ll go to [an] agency model, where you set the price, and we get our 30%, and yes, the customer pays a little more, but that’s what you want anyway.’ That quote was invoked as damning by the DoJ heroes.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Again, the U.S. DOJ is plainly inept.

Related articles:
Macmillan CEO blasts U.S. DOJ; gov’t on verge of killing real competition for appearance of competition – April 11, 2012
U.S. DOJ hits Apple,major publishers with antitrust lawsuit, alleges collusion on eBook prices – April 11, 2012
U.S. DOJ may sue Apple over ebook price-fixing as early as today, sources say – April 11, 2012

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