Eventually
Apple agreed to a settlement also but its settlement was contingent on the outcome of its appeal.
Not exact matches
Following in the footsteps of a 32.5 M
settlement reached with
Apple in January, Google has
agreed to pay back over $ 19M in charges racked up by kids playing games on smartphones and tablets.
After countless hours of legal battle, Macmillan has finally
agreed upon a
settlement that appeased Judge Denise Cote and the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that alleged five of the Big Six publishers conspired with
Apple to fix the prices on ebooks sold through online retailers.
PW also points out that the
settlements agreed to by the publishers, and enforced upon
Apple in the findings against it, most favored nation clauses will not be allowed for five years.
The book publishers that were sued alongside
Apple agreed to pay about $ 160 million (check your Kindle account), but that came as part of a
settlement.
All I can say is that three of the publishers named in the suit have
agreed to a
settlement that will include cancelling the agency contract with
Apple.
Nearly two years ago,
Apple agreed to pay a
settlement worth $ 450 million for a lawsuit that accused the company of being in conspiracy with publishers in a price fixing scheme for e-books.
In the EU
settlement,
Apple and the settling publishers are subject
to the three same requirements that HarperCollins, Hachette and Simon & Schuster
agreed to in the U.S.:
Apple has
agreed to pay a $ 450 million
settlement to 33 U.S. states and consumers who accused the company of conspiring with publishers in an e-book price fixing scheme.
It should come as no surprise, then, that despite its success in litigating the merits, for business purposes
Apple has
agreed to a
settlement in 51 of the 57 closed cases.