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The Courts Apple

Apple's Battle With Epic Over Fortnite Could Reach Jury Trial Next July (cnet.com) 31

Apple and Epic met in a virtual court hearing on Monday to debate whether Fortnite should be allowed to remain in Apple's App Store while the two fight an even bigger battle over whether Apple is violating federal antitrust law. From a report: California Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers said didn't issue any update to her previous ruling, which upheld Apple's ban on Fortnite while the antitrust case is ongoing. Instead she said the companies should expect to hear from her in writing. Rogers said that it's likely that the case, which she added was "the frontier of antitrust law," will be heard in July 2021. She recommended a trial by jury in order that the final judgement reached would be more likely stand up to appeal, although said it's up to Apple or Epic to request this.

[...] In court on Monday, Rogers seemed less than impressed with the arguments put forward by Epic's legal team. She said that in the gaming industry, of which Epic is a part, it was standard practice for platforms to take 30% commission, as Apple does. She challenged Epic over its decision to circumvent Apple's policy in spite of its explicit contractual relations with the company, saying the company had "lied about it by omission." "You were not forthright," she said. "You were told you couldn't do it, and you did. There's an old saying, a rose by any other name is still a rose [...] There are plenty of people in the public could consider you guys heroes for what you did, but it's still not honest."

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Apple's Battle With Epic Over Fortnite Could Reach Jury Trial Next July

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  • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Monday September 28, 2020 @04:40PM (#60551678)

    Missing from the summary but mentioned in reporting elsewhere is that there are apparently talks to hold the 30% in escrow during the trial. More or less, Epic gets to come back, use their own credit card processing, and have 100% of the funds hit their account, just as they were before they got booted, but then 30% of those funds are put in escrow pending the results of the trial. It's theoretically a win-win, since Epic doesn't like losing 10% of Fortnite's revenue and Apple doesn't like this sort of PR.

  • Great (Score:3, Insightful)

    by aitikin ( 909209 ) on Monday September 28, 2020 @04:41PM (#60551680)

    So we're going to have to hear from Apple defenders and Epic defenders for at least another 10 months. Because 2020 wasn't bad enough.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      I wouldn't worry about it. The new-years eve 2020 asteroid strike will take us all out anyway.
    • Think of how long the Google vs Oracle case has been going on. It's been a decade and the case isn't finished yet. You can expect this one to take about as long. "Hitting the jury" is the end of the first phase.
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      So, don't pay attention to them?

    • So we're going to have to hear from Apple defenders and Epic defenders for at least another 10 months. Because 2020 wasn't bad enough.

      If you don't want to discuss legal issues affecting tech companies I honestly wonder why you would read Slashdot in the first place. This isn't new. This isn't Apple vs Epic. This is a question on what constitutes abuse of monopoly and enforceable contractual obligations affecting the entire industry.

      Today it's Apple vs Epic. A few years ago Oracle vs Google. Before that IBM vs SCO. Welcome to Slashdot, a site where we discuss relevant shit like this.

      • by aitikin ( 909209 )
        The "woosh" you may have just heard was the joke flying by. That being said...how in the hell did I get modded "Insightful" for that?!
  • Pistols at noon. They could sell tickets and Apple could make 30 percent. Well, until noon.
  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by agm ( 467017 )

      That's not anything like what's happening here though. Epic starting distributing apps on the iOS app store knowing full well what the conditions of doing that was. Apple hasn't changed anything regarding this. Epic have decided that they don't like the rules that they originally agreed to so they ignored them. And Apple followed the guidelines and fought back. As they should have. Epic don't have to distribute their apps on iOS, but if they do they need to follow the rules that other app developers have to

    • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

      Imagine if tomorrow MSFT put out an update that denied you installing anything except through the MSFT Store, no more chrome, no more Firefox, no Steam, nothing that MSFT didn't approve of and get a 30% cut of...everyone would have a screaming shitfit, right?

      No, because according to the judge, it's already a "standard practice for platforms to take 30% commission" so things are probably already the way you're hypothesizing.

      • The lawsuit is about antitrust and anticompetitive practices, not the 30% rate.

        The 10 allegations are focused around how Apple is (illegally) using their monopoly as the hardware vendor to create a secondary monopoly for the store, and they are (illegally) using their monopoly as the only permitted store to create a monopoly on payment processing.

        And it doesn't matter if something has been a standard practice, what matters is if it violates antitrust law. If multiple business are all violating antitrust la

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        "No, because according to the judge, it's already a "standard practice for platforms to take 30% commission"

        Thanks for saying almost outright that it's basically collusion, judge!

    • The difference being that Apple's smartphone has always been locked down, and thatâ(TM)s been a major selling point. You want the Curated Walled Garden, you have it. Or go get a Samsung, despite what fanboys scream, the platforms are very similar, which one you choose is just a matter of personal taste.
      • The walled garden is a selling point, but locking people into it isn't. By the time they find out that they want something outside the garden, it's too late; they've bought apps, they've made a training investment in their device, and they're unlikely to switch. All their data is already in the one system and they don't want to have to go through a lot of trouble to move it to the other.

    • If Windows had operated that way from the start it wouldn't be a problem. However, for them to do so after establishing their de facto monopoly would be very problematic. The problem wouldn't be that they had a walled garden or charged 30%—the problem would be that they pulled off a massive bait-and-switch. Too many industries are dependent on Windows for them to get away with that. It's not like with Apple where people can just switch to Android.

      Furthermore, I'm willing to bet that as more things mov

    • Chrome and Firefox are cost free ... so no idea what you want to say.

      just because fashionista like the apple logo don't mean they should get a pass.
      No one cares about the logo except Apple haters ...

    • Imagine if tomorrow MSFT put out an update that denied you installing anything except through the MSFT Store

      Imagine if Microsoft pulled a version of Windows that only allowed to install applications from their store and... oh, wait! [wikipedia.org]

  • I hope they find a fair jury because this trial could have much bigger implications than just fortnite and Apple. Both companies have a lot of fans and the getting a fair jury could be a challenge. Letting fanboys decide this is probably not good for this country.
  • by trawg ( 308495 ) on Tuesday September 29, 2020 @03:06AM (#60552938) Homepage

    I'll support Epic's bid to force Apple to let other people run their own app stores when they let other people run their own digital shopfronts within Fortnite. I would also like to sell virtual doll clothes.

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