Apple Ordered to Stagger E-Book Contract Negotiations, Refrain From 'Most Favored Nation' Clauses - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Apple Ordered to Stagger E-Book Contract Negotiations, Refrain From 'Most Favored Nation' Clauses

iBooks.pngJudge Denise Cote today issued her penalty ruling in the e-book pricing suit against Apple, ruling that Apple must stagger its contract negotiations with major publishers to prevent collusion and avoid entering into "most favored nation" (MFN) agreements with any publisher for five years, according to GigaOM. The MFN clauses in Apple's contracts with publishers prevented any other e-book retailer from undercutting Apple, giving Apple the right to at least match the best pricing offered by other retailers.

Judge Cote’s injunction forbids Apple from enforcing most-favored-nation clauses in any ebook publishing contracts for five years, and also forbids the company from entering into any book publishing contracts that contain them for five years. Apple had wanted this provision to be less broad, relating only to MFN clauses with the five publishers in the case who have already settled. Instead, it applies to all publishers.

Judge Cote defined the order in which Apple will be permitted to renegotiate contracts with publishers, beginning with Hachette 24 months after the judgment's effective date and staggering negotiations every six months thereafter for the five publishers involved in the case.

Apple is also required to hire an external compliance monitor to ensure that the company is complying with antitrust requirements.

In a win for Apple, Cote's ruling does not require the company to allow the return of direct store links from competing e-book distributors in their App Store apps, something the U.S. Department of Justice had requested in its proposed penalties.

Apple continues to deny that it engaged in price fixing, and is pursuing an appeal of the guilty verdict.

Popular Stories

imac video apple feature

Apple Released Yet Another New Product Today

Friday March 20, 2026 2:39 pm PDT by
Apple has unveiled a whopping nine new products so far this March, including an iPhone 17e, iPad Air models with the M4 chip, MacBook Air models with the M5 chip, MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, the all-new MacBook Neo, an updated Studio Display, a higher-end Studio Display XDR, AirPods Max 2, and now the Nike Powerbeats Pro 2. iPhone 17e features the same overall design as...
iPhone 18 Pro Deep Red Feature

iPhone 18 Pro Launching Later This Year With These 12 New Features

Wednesday March 18, 2026 7:39 am PDT by
While the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max are not expected to launch for another six months or so, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices. It was initially reported that the iPhone 18 Pro models would have fully under-screen Face ID, with only a front camera visible in the top-left corner of the screen. However, the latest rumors indicate that only one Face ID component...
ios 26 4 pastel

iOS 26.4: Top 10 New Features Coming to Your iPhone

Friday March 20, 2026 2:44 pm PDT by
iOS 26.4 isn't the major update with new Siri features that we hoped for, but there are some useful quality of life improvements, and a little bit of fun with an AI playlist generator and new emoji characters. Playlist Playground - Apple Music has a Playlist Playground option that lets you generate playlists from text-based descriptions. You can include moods, feelings, activities, or...

Top Rated Comments

DipDog3 Avatar
164 months ago
Actually these punishments are not too bad. I think Apple should just accept these and move on.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
164 months ago
In one sense, they got the book thrown at them
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Rafagon Avatar
164 months ago
DOJ you have bigger problems than Apple

DOJ sure seems to have a lot of free time on their hands... worrying about ebook sales and pricing...
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
164 months ago
Government is overreaching here, by telling a corporation what they can and cannot do.

If the law is clear, Apple has to abide by it and if they don't they should get fined every time they break it until they do.

Anything else is not the DOJ's or a judges business.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
PracticalMac Avatar
164 months ago
Win for the most dominant eBook retailer Amazon?
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
164 months ago
DOJ sure seems to have a lot of free time on their hands... worrying about ebook sales and pricing...

I know. When you consider the tons of other significantly worse behavior that goes on in American corporations completely unchecked, its actually pretty pathetic they go full-blast on a stupid little e-book case but don't give that same treatment to the scum oligopolists like big oil companies, or the telephone carriers who almost certainly engage in price fixing as well AND have an oligopoly. However, allow publishers to raise ebook prices 3 dollars, and you'll get swarmed by Uncle Sam.

America the Beautiful.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Macbook Neo Vs Air | Apple Tv Deals | Macos | Chargerlab | Ecovacs Deebot X11 Omnicyclone