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The Apple Antitrust Lawsuit May Signal that Regulators are Starting to Catch Up with Big Tech; Also, the (Astrophysics) Revolution Will Be Seen Through the James Webb Space Telescope
Call It Like I See It
English - March 26, 2024 21:15 - 56 minutes - 129 MB - ★★★★★ - 10 ratingsSociety & Culture News News Commentary news politics science technology psychology environment Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Following the recent antitrust lawsuit filed against Apple in the US, James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana consider the ongoing efforts in the US and in Europe to attack several of Apple’s business practices in in today’s view of the historical context of antitrust enforcement (1:21). The guys also explain why it is a good thing that some of the findings from the new James Webb Space Telescope are knocking holes many of our current theories on how the universe works (40:41).
Apple sued by Biden administration over alleged iPhone 'monopoly power' (NBC News)
Green bubbles, Apple Pay and other reasons why America says Apple is breaking the law (CNN)
Apple to put USB-C connectors in iPhones to comply with EU rules (The Guardian)
EU investigating Apple, Google and Meta's suspected violations of new Digital Markets Act (CBS News)
US Regulators Urge Congress to Look Into Grocery Profits (VOA News)
Author Thom Hartmann says average family pays $5K ‘monopoly tax’ to large companies (The Hill)
Physicist Claims Universe Has No Dark Matter And Is 27 Billion Years Old (Science Alert)
Did the James Webb telescope ‘break the universe’? Maybe not (Science News)
What are the true colors of images from the James Webb Space Telescope? (Space.com)