Apple ha presentado una demanda por un total de mil millones de dólares en contra de su proveedor Qualcomm, a pocos días de que el fabricante de microchips fuese acusado por el gobierno de EEUU de llevar a cabo prácticas anti competitivas con tal de mantener su monopolio sobre una serie de semi-conductores de vital importancia para la industria de la telefonía móvil.
Featured News
US Appeals Court Tosses FTC Order Over Intuit’s “Free” TurboTax Ads
Mar 22, 2026 by
CPI
Jury Finds Musk Liable for Misleading Twitter Shareholders During Takeover Fight
Mar 22, 2026 by
CPI
FTC Launches Healthcare Task Force to Sharpen Enforcement
Mar 22, 2026 by
CPI
White House Pushes Congress for National AI Law to Override State Rules
Mar 22, 2026 by
CPI
Anthropic Copyright Settlement Lawyers Cut Fee Request to $187.5 Million
Mar 22, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Data-Driven Competition
Mar 19, 2026 by
CPI
Data-Driven Competition: Implications For Enforcement and Merger Control
Mar 19, 2026 by
Alexandre de Corniere & Greg Taylor
From Tipping to Trustees: Why Data-Driven Markets Require Institutional Design, Not Optimization
Mar 19, 2026 by
Jens Prüfer & Paul de Bijl
Data Barriers to Entry: What We’ve Learned About Spotting Them and What We Still Don’t Know About Solutions
Mar 19, 2026 by
Bruno Carballa-Smichowski
When the Perfect Is the Enemy of the Good: Price Discrimination, Affordability, Precarity and Market Dynamism
Mar 19, 2026 by
Dan Ciuriak
Qualcomm es el principal proveedor de microchips “modem”, dispositivos que permiten conectar los teléfonos con las redes inalámbricas, para Apple y para Samsung Electronics. En conjunto, ambas empresas representan el 40% de las ganancias de Qualcomm en el año más reciente – un total de más de $23,500 mdd.