Today in Apple history: Eddy Cue takes the stand to defend iBooks pricing

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Eddy Cue took the stand to testify about Apple's e-book pricing in a 2013 antitrust trial targeting the iBooks Store.
Photo: Apple

June 13: Today in Apple history: Eddy Cue takes the stand to defend iBooks pricing June 13, 2013: Apple exec Eddy Cue takes the stand to defend the company’s iBooks business strategy in an antitrust case regarding e-book pricing.

Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of internet software and services, runs the iBooks Store initiative. His testimony proves vital to a case brought by the Department of Justice, in which potential damages climb well into the nine figures.

History of the iBooks lawsuit

Filed in April 2012, The United States of America v. Apple Inc. antitrust case alleged that Apple conspired with five book publishers to raise and fix the price of e-books.

The publishers included Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, Macmillan Publishers, Penguin and Simon & Schuster. All five settled their claims outside of court — only Apple went to trial.

The agreement in question came as a response to Amazon, which controlled the overwhelming majority of the e-book industry in terms of sales. Amazon charged $9.99 for many popular books as part of its goal to become a market leader with its Kindle e-book reader.

iPad: A savior for book publishers?

However, this upset publishers, who worried that the low pricing ate away at their profit margins. When Apple launched the iPad in 2010, the publishing houses saw an opportunity to claw back some lost ground.

This was evidently Apple’s strategy as well. When Cue spoke with publishers in late 2009, he said Apple planned to sell new books for $12.99 to $14.99.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs got quizzed about this subject early in the iPad’s lifespan. In a conversation with Walt Mossberg soon after the iPad keynote, the journalist asked Jobs why anyone would want to spend $14.99 on an Apple e-book when they could buy the same thing from Amazon for $9.99.

“That won’t be the case,” Jobs responded.

“You won’t be $14.99 or they won’t be $9.99?” Mossberg followed up.

“The prices will be the same,” Jobs said. “Publishers are actually withholding their books from Amazon because they’re not happy.”

Eddy Cue testifies in Apple e-books pricing lawsuit

In the end, as Jobs predicted, prices rose. Amazon remained the market leader by the time the case got to court, but the internet retailer’s dominance had fallen from 90% to 65%. Barnes & Noble had eked out 20%, while Apple’s percentage languished in the single digits.

As the main negotiator for Apple, Cue’s testimony in the court case was considered a crucial piece of evidence. On the witness stand, the Apple exec acknowledged that prices of some e-books rose after the iBooks Store opened. However, he said this stemmed more from publishers’ unhappiness with Amazon than anything Apple did.

He also said he didn’t know whether publishers were working together, but said, “If they talked together, I assumed it would be easier to get the deals done.”

Ultimately, a federal court found that Apple colluded with publishers. The company settled out of court in the price-fixing suit, in which potential damages rose as high as $840 million. The court also appointed an antitrust monitor to watch over Apple, which caused Cupertino no end of headaches in the following years.

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