Core Viewpoint - Apple, Visa, and Mastercard achieved a legal victory in an antitrust lawsuit, with a federal judge dismissing the case due to insufficient evidence from the plaintiffs [2][3]. Group 1: Legal Proceedings - U.S. District Judge David Dugan ruled that the merchants did not provide adequate evidence to support their claims against Apple for not launching a competing payment network [2]. - The judge allowed the plaintiffs to amend their lawsuit to strengthen their claims, despite finding their initial allegations to be circumstantial [3]. - The defendants, Apple, Visa, and Mastercard, denied any wrongdoing and sought dismissal of the lawsuit [3]. Group 2: Allegations and Defense - The lawsuit, filed in 2023, accused Apple of conspiring with Visa and Mastercard to avoid competition, claiming that Visa and Mastercard paid Apple a significant portion of transaction fees for purchases made using Apple Pay [4]. - The plaintiffs alleged that these payments constituted a "very large and ongoing cash bribe" amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars annually [5]. - Apple contended that the complaint did not demonstrate any intention to enter the payments network market to compete with Visa or Mastercard [5]. Group 3: Industry Context - The ruling comes at a time when mobile wallets are increasingly influencing consumer in-store transactions globally, accounting for 21% of all in-store transactions, reflecting a 10.9% increase since 2022 [6].
Apple, Visa and Mastercard Antitrust Lawsuit Tossed by Federal Judge