Category Archives: headline

US spiritual leader 'Mother God' found mummified with Christmas lights

Authorities have arrested several people after the mummified body of the leader of the US spiritual group “Love Has Won” was found wrapped in a sleeping bag and decorated with Christmas lights in a southern Colorado home.

Amy Carlson, 45, who was known as “Mother God” by her followers, was found dead in a home in the tiny, rural town of Moffat on April 28, according to arrest affidavits for seven people, who are each charged with abuse of a corpse.

A follower told investigators he knew the woman as Lia Carlson, and a Saguache County sheriff's corporal wrote in the affidavits that Carlson is believed to be the leader of the group. It's unclear why the follower provided the name Lia.

READ MORE: Russian cult leader who hears words of God arrested in Siberia

The follower, who has not been charged, told investigators he had taken in a group of people who needed a place to stay, and he found the body in a back bedroom when he returned home Wednesday following a trip to Denver. He reported the discovery to police and said he believed the group had transported Carlson's body to his home from California.

“The mummified remains appeared to be set up in some type of shrine" and “have what appears to be glitter-type makeup on around the eyes,” according to the affidavits.

Investigators searched an SUV on the property and said the back seat was laid down in a position “consistent with someone transporting the mummified remains.”

The Saguache County coroner's office has not said when Carlson died and has not released the cause or manner of death.

READ MORE: Cult 'Superspreader' linked to spike in South Korean cases

Two children — a 13-year-old girl and a two-year-old boy — were in the home at the time, and the seven people who were arrested are also facing child abuse charges.

According to the affidavits, the sheriff's office has received “many complaints” from families across the country saying “Love Has Won" is brainwashing people and stealing their money.

Carlson’s followers believe she communicated with angels and that she was leading them to a great awakening, The Denver Post reported Monday.

The group, which established itself in southern Colorado in 2018, offers “spiritual intuitive ascension sessions” and sells spiritual healing products online.

Instagram for kids under 13 a 'stepping stone to get children hooked'

Any Facebook plan to build an Instagram for kids under 13 should be viewed the same as Big Tobacco using lolly cigarettes to lure youth, a marketing expert has warned.

Last month Buzzfeed obtained an internal memo from Instagram executives which detailed the social media behemoth's plans to create a version of its popular social media app for use by young children.

Dr Torgeir Aleti, a lecturer in economics and marketing at RMIT University, expressed alarm at the memo which outlined "youth work as a priority for Instagram".

A leaked Instagram memo detailed plans of the social media photo giant to launch a new platform aimed at children aged under 13 years old. Facebook, founded by Mark Zuckerberg, owns Instagram.

READ MORE: Facebook won't notify millions exposed in online database

"Instagram will probably look at their idea like Lego, and so this is their Duplo version," he said, referring to an entry level brick set for the toy brand.

"But I look at (Instagram for kids under 13) more like lolly cigarettes.

"This is very basic marketing," he said, "the earlier you get consumers the more loyal they stay throughout their life.

Dr Aleti described the plan as a "stepping stone to get young children hooked", like how Big Tobacco had been linked to now-banned lolly cigarettes.

Currently, children must be at least 13 to use Instagram.

The internal memo published by Buzzfeed was written on an employee message board by Vishal Shah, Instagram's vice president of product.

"I'm excited to announce that going forward, we have identified youth work as a priority for Instagram and have added it to our H1 priority list," Mr Shah wrote.

"We will be building a new youth pillar within the Community Product Group to focus on two things: (a) accelerating our integrity and privacy work to ensure the safest possible experience for teens and (b) building a version of Instagram that allows people under the age of 13 to safely use Instagram for the first time."

READ MORE: Deepfake nudes change face of cyber threats, revenge porn and scams

Nine.com.au contacted Facebook but they did not comment on whether Instagram was advancing plans for the under-13 demographic.

Last week a study conducted by an Australian lobby group claimed it had found a loophole on Facebook which allowed teenagers to be targeted with advertising based on a range of age-inappropriate interests, such as alcohol, smoking, gambling, and extreme weight loss.

Reset Australia created a series of ads to check what oversight Facebook had over underage profiling.

It said Facebook greenlit ads targeting teenagers which included vaping, cocktail recipes, political extremism, extreme weight loss and adult dating.

READ MORE: Facebook must be broken up, US government demands in lawsuit

Reset Australia created a series of ads targeting teenagers with advertising based on a range of age inappropriate interests, such as alcohol, smoking, gambling, and extreme weight loss. Reset Australia found it costs advertisers $127 to target 1000 underage profiles with an interest in smoking, $38 to target 1000 underage profiles interested in extreme weight loss, and just $3 to target 1000 an underage profiles interested in alcohol.

"Should a 13-year-old who lists their single status be getting targeted ads for a sugar daddy dating service?" Reset Australia executive director Chris Cooper said.

"Should a 15-year-old profiled as interested in alcohol see ads that suggest cocktail recipes based on their parent's alcohol cabinet?"

He said 16-year-olds should not see ads about gambling or political extremism.

When approached by 9News.com.au, a Facebook company spokesperson did not refute that Reset Australia had been able to target the teenagers with the ads.

The spokesperson said that "keeping young people safe across Facebook and Instagram is vital".

Facebook had "significant measures in place" to review all ads before and after they run, the spokesperson said, including automated systems and human reviewers.

An example of how Reset Australia were able to drill into a teenager's interests to serve them inappropriate advertisements.

"Anyone advertising on our platforms must comply with our policies along with all local laws and codes, such as those restricting the advertising of alcohol to minors in Australia.

"To support this, we also have age restriction tools that all businesses can implement on their accounts themselves to control who sees their content."

Dr Aleti said parents and society had "absolutely reason to be concerned" by Reset Australia's experimentation with Facebook ads, which the lobby group did not publish.

The thing that concerned him most, he said, was "how easily it was done".

He said moves to regulate Facebook and other Silicon Valley social media titans was "well overdue".

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg watches a demonstration of Facebook video chat at Facebook headquarters in 2011.

On releasing its Q1 earnings last week, Facebook said it counts 3.45 billion monthly users across its family of apps, which include Facebook Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp.

The company also flagged it was bracing itself for "ad targeting headwinds" at the end of the year.

Those comments are believed directed towards Apple's recent privacy changes in iOS 14 which will impede Facebook from harvesting data from users.

Contact: ms******@******om.au

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More storms expected after fog swallows Brisbane

The dense fog which blanketed much of Brisbane and surrounding areas this morning has cleared, but the cold front which generated it is expected to create more storms.

The heavy mist caused a number of major traffic crashes this morning, with motorists urged to take care on the roads.

Upper Coomera saw one man hospitalised with neck and back pain and seven people treated at the scene of a multi-car crash on the M1 motorway.

The crash resulted in heavy traffic in the area with poor visibility causing headaches for those trying to make their way into work.

READ MORE: Rare sight as Darwin is blanketed in thick fog

https://twitter.com/R_DAlessandro9/status/1389341912004325376?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

READ MORE: Sydney smoke seen from space as city disappears behind thick fog

The strange weather phenomenon hit Brisbane's CBD in the early hours with heavier coverage across western towns, including Ipswich.

Fog was thickest to the west of Brisbane according to Weatherzone, with inland areas of northeast NSW also seeing heavy mists. Westerly winds managed to carry some of the fog towards the coast.

https://twitter.com/R_DAlessandro9/status/1389314234278809600?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

The Bureau of Meteorology says the thick fog is because of moisture at ground level which is being compressed from above by a mass of dry air creating cloud at ground level.

While the fog from this morning has lifted, the moisture that helped caused it is likely to fuel showers and some thunderstorms in southeast Queensland and northeast NSW this afternoon and evening, according to meteorologists.

The atmosphere is likely to become even more unstable tomorrow, with thunderstorms expected and severe storms possible.

Brisbane fogBrisbane fog

Sydney air quality still poor as hazard reduction burns continue

Large parts of Sydney are continuing to see poor air quality as controlled burns continue at several sites.

Sydney's air quality has received a "poor or worse" category from Environment NSW for another day with pollution levels still high from the hazard reduction burns.

Yesterday, the smoke in Sydney was so severe it could be seen from space with satellites capturing the haze from thousands of kilometres above the Earth.

https://twitter.com/NSWHealth/status/1389010088996741129?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

READ MORE: Sydney smoke seen from space

The thick Sydney haze was due to smoke particles from recent hazard reduction burns mixing with developing fog.

NSW Health has warned people with asthma and breathing difficulties to take precautions to protect themselves from the poor quality air, avoid going outside if possible and seek medical advice if they become unwell.

Federal Budget 2021: What we know so far

In a week's time the Federal Government will hand down its 2021-22 Budget after what has been one of the most expensive policy years in Australian history.

From JobKeeper to JobSeeker and all the associated costs with shielding the nation from a global pandemic that touched every business sector in the country, many expected this year's Budget to be modest.

But a near unrivalled economic bounce back, better-than-expected unemployment figures and a willingness of Aussie families to spend post lockdown could see the government in a better windfall than expected.

READ MORE: Boost for young families with $1.7 billion childcare package

Money

"Whilst there are still risks for parts of the economy, in particular tourism and hospitality, and with some setbacks to the vaccine rollout, it's certainly a rosier outlook than the Treasurer would have predicted when he delivered the last budget in October," said Mark Molesworth, Tas Partner at BDO in Australia.

"This year's budget will be a 'Push Me Pull You' scenario. The need for budget repair will push the Government in one direction, but the whiff of an upcoming election will pull them in the other."

Mr Molesworth predicts much of the budget to be aimed at shoring up gender equality in the workplace, as well as changes to the way taxation works.

"Australia currently has a 20th century tax system operating in a 21st century economy. We need to change the settings to provide a stable tax base even during a downturn like the one we have experienced with COVID19," Mr Molesworth predicts.

"However, there are likely to be tax sweeteners for voters, in particular personal tax rate cuts for middle income earners, with more than 10 million Aussies earning under $120,000 due to face a tax hike from next financial year.

"The Government will be looking to spend money on the policies that will help them win at the polls in 2022."

READ MORE: Unemployment falls again in Australia, Treasurer flags optimistic outlook

Partner at Deloitte Access Economics Chris Richardson has an equally rosy outlook, predicting that the Budget will show that Australia's deficits in the four years to 2023-24 will be as much as $98 billion less than Treasury Estimates.

But to get back into the black, some $40 billion will need to be found down the back of the hypothetical Treasury couch.

"Our analysis shows that we may eventually need to save the equivalent of $40 billion a year to get the budget back into balance," writes Richardson.

"Australians do need to realise that there's an eventual bill to pay – it isn't nearly as large as many seem to fear, but nor is it nothing. And the politics here are horrendous.

"If you'd like a yardstick, the last budget that tried to save a similar share of national income was in 2014, and it is widely seen as having torpedoed the fortunes of Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey."

READ MORE: After COVID crash, IMF tips record growth for 2021

WHAT WE ALREADY KNOW ABOUT THE 2021-22 FEDERAL BUDGET

Savings for working Aussie families

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has already announced a $1.7 billion package aimed to ease out-of-pocket costs for working families utilising childcare.

From July, the childcare subsidy for families with two or more children aged five and under will increase to a maximum of 95 per cent.

The measure has been forecast to save as many as 250,000 families as much as $2,260 a year.

For example, a family on a combined income of $80,000 with two kids in childcare will save around $54 a week while families on a combined income of $140,000 will be around $125 a week better off.

The current maximum for the childcare subsidy is 85 per cent.

READ MORE: Boost for young families with $1.7 billion childcare package

Big spending will focus on dropping unemployment

Speaking to the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr Frydenberg said the entire budget would be aimed at increasing employment opportunities.

"This will be another pandemic budget being delivered in the midst of a once-in-a-hundred year pandemic and just seven months after the last budget," Mr Frydenberg said.

"The Budget will lay out the next phase of Australia's economic recovery plan, to grow our economy so we can deliver the jobs and guarantee the essential services Australians rely on, and keep Australians safe."

Mr Frydenberg said the government's clear goal was to reduce the unemployment rate below five per cent.

Australia's current unemployment rate is currently 5.6 per cent.

READ MORE: Morrison government spends $1.2b to create thousands of apprenticeships

Tax breaks for brewers

Brewers and distillers are set to be better off under the 2021-22 Budget, with the Federal Government already announcing tax cuts of up to $250,000 for the sector.

Under the plan, from July 1 the government will remove all excise tax payable on the first $350,000 worth of alcohol that leaves the alcohol producer's warehouse.

The tax cuts will primarily benefit craft breweries and smaller distillers.

More Queenslanders can head to the pub from today, as coronavirus restrictions ease.

READ MORE: Pub beers could soon be cheaper

Driver says mobile phone in photo 'was chocolate bar'

A NSW man has cried foul after being fined for using his mobile phone while driving, claiming he has photo evidence proving his innocence.

Scott Phillips told 2GB's Ben Fordham he was driving north from Bowral when he was pinged by a detection camera.

In NSW, drivers found to be using their mobile phones are subjected to a $349 fine and a five demerit point penalty.

A photo provided to 2GB by Scott Phillips appears to show his phone in his docking station.

Mr Phillips said he was immediately doubtful he had committed the offence.

"I got a notice in the mail and I thought, hang on, I wouldn't have been doing that," he said. "I never use my phone in my hand. I have always got it on the dock."

A photo of the incident, provided by Mr Phillips to 2GB, appears to show a phone sitting in a docking station on his car dashboard.

Mr Phillips, meanwhile, appears to be holding a blurry item in his hands.

https://omny.fm/shows/ben-fordham-full-show/should-this-driver-be-fined/embed?style=cover

He said he did not remember what he was holding but thought it may have been a chocolate bar.

"It was probably a chocolate bar… someone said it could be sunglasses… but it's definitely not my mobile phone," he said.

Mr Phillips said he had asked for a review of the incident but was troubled that he could be fined for something it was far from clear he had done.

"How do I get five demerit points and a fine for something that might be a phone, might be sunglasses, might be chocolate," he said.

Mr Phillip's case is similar to a Melbourne mother, who was fined last year for using her mobile phone but claimed she was actually eating a Magnum ice-cream.

A Current Affair investigation this year also spoke to people who said they were fined after holding hats and wallets in their hands while driving.

Sydney woman fights mobile phone fine

A Sydney mother said her perfect driving record could be ruined by a mobile phone fine based on a photograph she claimed showed nothing.

The woman said she had carplay and claimed she didn't need to touch her phone when she was driving.

Puerto Rican boxer charged with murdering pregnant lover

Puerto Rican boxer Félix Verdejo turned himself in to federal agents to face charges hours after authorities identified the body of a dead woman as his 27-year-old pregnant lover, officials said.

Mr Verdejo has been charged with the murder of Keishla Rodríguez Ortiz, along with her kidnapping, carjacking resulting in death and intentionally killing an unborn child, according to the US Attorney's Office in Puerto Rico.

A criminal complaint filed by the FBI accuses Mr Verdejo of punching the pregnant 27-year-old in the face and injecting her with a syringe filled with an unidentified substance bought at a public housing complex.

The FBI accuses Felix Verdejo of punching Keishla Rodriguez in the face and injecting her with a syringe filled with an unidentified substance bought at a public housing complex.

READ MORE: NZ businessman fined for naming Grace Millane's Tinder killer

It alleges he then bound her arms and feet with wire and tied a heavy block to her before throwing her off a bridge at 8.30am on Thursday.

The complaint states that Mr Verdejo then shot at Rodríguez's body as he stood on the bridge.

The complaint says a witness it did not identify helped Mr Verdejo kidnap and kill Ms Rodríguez.

Ms Rodríguez was found in a lagoon near the US territory's capital on Saturday, a couple of days after she was reported missing.

She was identified Sunday via dental records, Puerto Rico’s Institute of Forensic Science said in a statement.

Mr Verdejo and his lawyers previously declined comment, and police said the boxer did not originally cooperate and refused to answer questions.

READ MORE: Deepfake nudes change the face of cyber threats

Ms Rodríguez’s family said she was pregnant with Verdejo’s child.

Keila Ortiz, the victim’s mother, told reporters that her daughter had called her before she vanished on Thursday and told her that Mr Verdejo was going to her house to see the results of a pregnancy test.

“I told her, ‘Be careful,’ because he had already threatened her,'' Ms Ortiz said.

She said Mr Verdejo had told her daughter not to have the baby, mentioning his career and family.

Mr Verdejo is married and has a young daughter but had known Rodríguez since middle school and kept in touch with her, her parents said.

They reported her missing after she didn't show up for her job at an animal grooming business.

Mr Verdejo (27-2, 17 knockouts) represented Puerto Rico at the Olympics in 2012, the same year he became a professional boxer competing in the lightweight division.

His career was temporarily sidetracked after a 2016 motorcycle accident that put him in the hospital.

READ MORE: Scene of alleged Queensland double murder left untouched for weeks

Puerto Rican boxer Felix Verdejo was arrested on Sunday in Puerto Rico.

The case has outraged many in Puerto Rico, where another woman was recently found burned to death after she filed a domestic violence complaint that a judge dismissed.

A Superior Court judge has announced an investigation into that decision.

Hundreds of people gathered yesterday at a bridge that crosses the lagoon where Ms Rodríguez's body was found to demand justice for her and other women killed, with some throwing flowers into the water below.

Lifeline 13 11 14; Mensline 1300 789 978; Kids Helpline 1800 551 800; beyondblue 1300 224 636; Domestic Violence Line 1800 65 64 63; 1800-RESPECT 1800 737 732

With Associated Press

Fortnite v Apple in trial that could remake the digital economy

Ever since its launch in 2008, the Apple App Store has been the sole gatekeeper between apps and iPhones and iPads.

Other platforms, such as Google's Android, allow apps to be downloaded through third-party app stores. But for any developers who want on to Apple's mobile devices, the choice is simple — it's the App Store or nothing.

Because it has set things up this way, Apple wields huge power over the terms it can dictate to app makers.

READ MORE: Why you need to update your iPhone now

One in particular has become a thorny issue, even if most consumers are unlikely to notice it: Any time you buy a digital product or service on many iOS apps, it is processed on an Apple-run payment system and Apple collects a 30 per cent fee.

Now, a federal judge is slated to decide: Is Apple's policy just a hugely successful business model — or is it a violation of US antitrust law?

In a trial starting On Monday (Tuesday AEST), the judge will consider whether Apple is justified in requiring many app makers — and by extension, consumers — to use the company's payments technology.

The potentially landmark trial stems from a lawsuit filed by the maker of the hit video game Fortnite, which Apple booted from its platform last summer for not complying with its rule.

The high-profile case will involve witnesses including Apple CEO Tim Cook and his top lieutenants. Representatives for Facebook and Microsoft are also expected to testify.

Corporate emails and presentations could fuel a fierce courtroom battle over app store policies, which are increasingly under scrutiny by regulators in Europe, lawmakers in the United States and many others.

READ MORE: Apple's iPhone privacy clampdown arrives after seven-month delay

The judge's ruling — and, of course, the appeals that will almost certainly follow — could have huge ramifications not only for Apple and its iOS ecosystem, but potentially for other app stores and the overall app economy, which has grown to hundreds of billions of dollars and supports millions of jobs.

It's a case that could either transform the way many in-app purchases work, or entrench the power tech platforms have to set the rules of an increasingly digital world.

As Silicon Valley's expanding reach has moved Congress to propose new laws aimed at restraining the tech industry's biggest players, the outcome of the case may even shape the broader future of tech regulation.

A swift removal

App developers and tech industry observers have complained about Apple's policies for years.

But things reached a boiling point last summer when Epic updated its hugely popular Fortnite app for iOS.

With the update, players were encouraged to buy virtual currency (used for items such as in-game outfits) directly from Epic, rather than from within the Fortnite app.

Players who used Epic's payment system would receive a discount reflecting a portion of Apple's fees, the company said.

As a violation of Apple's rules against outside payment channels, the announcement led to the game's swift removal from the Apple app store.

Existing players couldn't receive updates to the game and new players couldn't download the app.

That's when Epic sued and further escalated matters by launching a flashy publicity campaign with the hashtag #FreeFortnite.

It even released an ad that satirised, beat for beat, Apple's famous "1984" advertisement.

With the suit, Epic alleges that Apple holds a monopoly on the distribution of iOS apps, and that Apple's rules around payments are illegal because they shut out potential rivals.

The result, Epic has alleged, is higher prices for iOS users and less innovation in the app marketplace.

If it weren't for Apple's rules, Epic would launch its own iOS app store and offer cheaper payment systems, the company said in court filings.

But right now, "Epic is forced, like so many other developers, to charge higher prices on its users' in-app purchases on Fortnite in order to pay Apple's 30 per cent tax," the company wrote in its initial complaint.

Apple disputes that it operates a monopoly, arguing that consumers — and Fortnite fans — aren't forced into using Apple devices or Apple's app platform.

The 30 per cent fee it collects on app transactions is comparable, it says, to the 30 per cent commissions charged by other app stores and digital storefronts for video games.

And it was Epic that went out of its way to engineer a legal crisis so that it could bring the lawsuit in the first place, Apple argues, citing what it describes as an "intentional act of sabotage" by Epic to break its contracts with Apple.

READ MORE: Apple has win in court case over the removal of Fortnite game

'Project Liberty'

The trial is sure to have some lively moments, as the two sides have already sparred in front of the judge hearing it, Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, who was nominated by President Barack Obama in 2011 to serve on the US District Court for the Northern District of California.

Epic's decision to immediately sue and push to publicise its fight suggested it knew how events would unfold — something Epic's lawyers have acknowledged.

"When you are taking on the biggest company in the world, and you're taking it on where you know it's going to retaliate, you don't lie down in the street and die," Epic's attorney, Katherine Forrest, said in one appearance before the judge.

"You plan very carefully on how you're going to respond."

Records introduced during the pre-trial process showed that Epic developed a whole campaign to challenge Apple, called Project Liberty, of which the Fortnite app update and promotion were a critical part.

Apple argues the existence of Project Liberty shows the game company was acting in bad faith from the start, because the entire crisis was premeditated.

Further, it has argued that Epic is interested in its own profits, not competition.

"It initiated its 'Project Liberty' campaign as a means of reducing the price for which it must pay for the use of Apple's intellectual property, and initiated this litigation under the pretence that it simply wants to aid competition, not to boost its own profit margins," Apple claimed in a recent court filing.

Epic has conceded that it broke the terms of its contract with Apple but justified doing so as a reasonable response to alleged illegal behaviour by Apple.

READ MORE: How memes are the internet's next goldrush

Framing the case

The central idea behind Epic's lawsuit is that Apple allegedly used its exclusive ability to sell iOS apps as a form of monopolistic leverage. Apple rejects that premise, arguing that there is no monopoly to speak of, so there can be no antitrust violation.

Apple's store may be the only place for users to download iOS apps, but it isn't the only place users can find Fortnite or other video games, Apple argues.

Apple is, of course, part of a broader market of video game distributors that includes Microsoft, Sony, Nintendo, Valve and Epic itself, all of which operate their own video game software stores.

Besides, Apple has argued, its platform rules exist for good reasons, such as ensuring that consumers can't be targeted by malicious app makers.

It's not illegal to have a monopoly under US law; it's only illegal to try to preserve a monopoly at the expense of competition. By portraying itself as part of a competitive market of video game sellers, Apple seeks to avoid both criticisms.

Much of the case could hinge on this framing exercise, as well as the underlying justifications for Apple's store rules.

"The question at the heart of it," said Adam Kovacevich, founder of Chamber of Progress, a tech advocacy group backed by Google, "is this: 'Does Apple as the marketplace owner — do they have rights, essentially, to run their marketplace as they like?'"

Some legal experts say that, from a competition perspective, things are more complicated.

"Once people are in an ecosystem, they are very locked in," said John Bergmayer, an attorney at the consumer advocacy organization Public Knowledge.

"I have an investment in the apps I bought, I have all kinds of data and stuff. It would be a huge hassle to switch, and so most people just don't."

READ MORE: Apple confirms 'long-held' rumours

Under scrutiny

Scrutiny of app store policies has spiked internationally in the past year amid a wider turn against Big Tech.

European officials announced a probe of Apple's rules last summer. British authorities said in March they, too, were investigating. Last month Apple was fined $12 million in Russia over alleged anti-competitive app store policies; the company has disputed the allegations.

Last year, an investigation and report by the House Judiciary Committee's antitrust panel concluded that Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google enjoyed "monopoly power" and exercised it in ways that hindered innovation and reduced consumer choice.

Apple and Google were forced to defend their app store policies before a US Senate hearing last month led by the powerful antitrust subcommittee.

Major app companies including Spotify, Tile and Match Group — which owns the dating app Tinder — accused Apple and Google of everything from exorbitant marketplace fees to retaliation for refusing to comply with the platforms' terms.

Apple and Google rejected those allegations, arguing in the hearing that their platform policies helped ensure the safety and security of their app stores and that they do not engage in retaliatory behaviour.

But prominent lawmakers were not persuaded; subcommittee chair Senator Amy Klobuchar vowed to investigate claims of retaliation and Senator Mike Lee, the panel's top Republican, called Apple and Google's power over Americans "unprecedented."

At several points, both lawmakers quoted directly from documents filed in the Epic case.