The
bill is a companion to a measure introduced this week by a
bipartisan trio of senators which would bar big app stores from
requiring app providers to use alternate app stores and payment
systems.
Representative Ken Buck, the top Republican on the House
Judiciary Committee antitrust panel, introduced the measure
along with Representative Hank Johnson, a Democrat.
"For far too long, companies like Google and Apple have had a
stranglehold on app developers who are forced to take whatever
terms these monopolists set in order to reach their customers,"
Buck said in an email statement.
U.S. consumers spent nearly $33 billion last year in mobile app
stores and downloaded 13.4 billion apps, Buck's office said in a
statement.
Apple has previously defended its app store as "an unprecedented
engine of economic growth and innovation, one that now supports
more than 2.1 million jobs across all 50 states."
The stakes are high for Apple, whose App Store anchors its $53.8
billion services business as the smartphone market has matured.
Google has said that Android phones often have two or more app
stores preloaded.
The House Judiciary Committee passed six antitrust measures in
June, most of them aimed at hemming in tech giants Google,
Amazon, Apple and Facebook.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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