Judge in Fortnite case loosens Apple’s control over App Store

A US judge on Friday ruled in a major antitrust lawsuit against Apple’s App Store, striking down some of Apple’s restrictions on how developers can collect payments in apps.

The ruling came as part of a lawsuit brought by Epic Games, the creator of Fortnite. Epic accused Apple of running its App Store as a monopoly, exercising too much power over what apps are allowed and how they are run. It took aim at Apple’s in-app purchase policies, under which it charges developers up to 30% commission on profits.

Friday’s ruling strikes down a core part of Apple’s App Store rules, which prohibit developers from telling users about other places they can go to pay the developer directly rather than using Apple’s payment mechanisms.

Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers issued a nationwide order that allows developers to put into their apps “buttons, external links, or other calls to action that direct customers to purchasing mechanisms”.

The ruling also said that Apple cannot ban developers from communicating with customers via contact information that the developers obtained when customers signed up within the app.

But Gonzalez Rogers stopped short of granting Epic some of its other wishes, such as forcing Apple to open the iPhone up to third-party app stores.

The judge ruled Epic failed to demonstrate Apple is an illegal monopolist, but did show the smartphone giant engaged in “anticompetitive conduct” under California laws.

“A remedy to eliminate those provisions is appropriate,” the court ruling read. “This measured remedy will increase competition, increase transparency, increase consumer choice and information while preserving Apple’s iOS ecosystem which has procompetitive justifications.”

The feud between Apple and Epic Games intensified last August when Epic tried to bypass Apple’s App Store commission by launching its own payment system within its wildly popular game Fortnite. Apple responded by pulling the Fortnite game from the App Store.

Epic Games sued, and Friday’s ruling comes after a three-week trial in May before the US district court for the northern district of California. The trial saw Epic Games call its own chief executive, Tim Sweeney, to testify as well as the Apple chief executive, Tim Cook.

Cook in his highly anticipated testimony justified the way the App Store is run by appealing to user safety and privacy, arguing that Apple must thoroughly vet which apps are allowed in its platform.

The App Store is a major contributor to the profit growth that has helped give Apple its current market value of nearly $2.5tn, but how much the sector makes remained a heated point of contention during the trial.

Apple shares moved down about 3.4% on news of the decision, knocking $87bn off the company’s market value. Shares of Alphabet, which operates an app store for Android smartphones, reversed an earlier gain and were last down 0.8%.

Apple said in a statement: “As the court recognized, success is not illegal. Apple faces rigorous competition in every segment in which we do business, and we believe customers and developers choose us because our products and services are the best in the world.”

The orders are similar to a move that Apple made last week to conclude an investigation by the Japan Fair Trade Commission in which Apple said it would allow such “reader” apps like Netflix to provide a link to customers to sign up for a paid account outside of the app, skipping Apple’s commission.

source: theguardian.com