News

Apple Inc. lost its court fight over a €13 billion ($14.4 billion) Irish tax bill and Google lost its challenge over a €2.4 billion fine for abusing its market power, in a double boost to the ...
Google has lost its final legal challenge against a European Union penalty for giving its own shopping recommendations an illegal advantage over rivals in search results, ending a long-running ...
The iPhone maker’s proposal is designed to make it cheaper and less onerous for third-party developers to direct customers ...
Apple has submitted a legal challenge to an EU order to open up its closed ecosystem to rivals such as Meta and Alphabet's Google, saying the demands are unreasonable and hamper innovation.
The EU's DMA is said to be in the interests of consumers, but as its been implemented, it's just denying them iOS 26 features Apple can't risk giving away to rivals.
Apple will be hurting if it loses its $20b per year cash cow, but it has solid options for a future without the search giant. Google could lose a third of its business if the courts force it to ...
The revelation of a potential change from Google to an AI-powered search engine for Apple's Safari web browser caused shares in both tech firms to lose value on Wednesday.
While Google is probably going to come out of its antitrust legal fight intact, it's very likely that its $20 billion Safari default search deal with Apple will undergo some big changes.
EU officials said in April that Apple’s business terms for developers–namely obligations that prevent them from telling users about better deals outside of the App Store–are unfair.
Shares in Google parent Alphabet plunged more than eight percent on Wednesday after Apple executive Eddy Cue testified in federal court that Google’s search traffic on Apple devices declined ...
An EU court ruled in September that Apple owed more than $14 billion in back taxes to Ireland, while also upholding a $2.7 billion, fine against Google for violating the bloc’s antitrust rules.