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Judge deals blow to Apple over app payment set-up
A UNITED States judge has ordered Apple to loosen control over its App Store payment system, a blow to the global tech giant sparked by its anti-trust battle with Fortnite maker Epic Games.
In a ruling with significant potential to alter the digital economy, Apple will no longer be allowed to force developers to use its tightly-controlled sales tool.
It’s a change loudly demanded by app producers because of the up to 30 percent commission on purchases. However, the judge also ruled that Epic had not proved its claim of illegal monopoly — which prompted a sigh of relief from Apple.
Lawsuits, rules and probes have piled up for the iPhone maker, but it was noncommittal about challenging the ruling and instead lauded the anti-trust portion by saying: “We consider this a huge win for Apple.”
Epic for its part branded the judgment as essentially a loss for app developers who rely on the App Store in the multi-billion-dollar mobile gaming industry, and for consumers. “We will fight on,” Epic CEO Tim Sweeney tweeted, and a company spokesperson later confirmed they would appeal.
Friday’s order says Apple is permanently barred from stopping developers from including in their apps “external links or other calls to action that direct customers to purchasing mechanisms.”
“Apple enjoys considerable market share of over 55 percent and extraordinarily high profit margins... (but) Success is not illegal,” California federal Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers wrote. “Epic Games failed in its burden to demonstrate Apple is an illegal monopolist.”
The decision noted that Apple violated California’s laws against unfair competition, however.
The two firms clashed in a lawsuit over whether Apple has the right to set ground rules, control payment systems and kick out apps from its marketplace that fail to comply.
Also at stake was Apple’s slice of revenue from iPhone apps of as much as 30 percent.
Apple booted Fortnite from its online mobile marketplace after Epic released an update that dodged revenue sharing with the iPhone maker.
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