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Apple asks judge to co-operate on its legal antics

by on11 October 2021


Help us stuff up Fortnite’s victory


The fruity cargo cult Apple has asked a US federal judge to help it mess up an antitrust victory by Epic Games.

For those who came in late, US district Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in September required Apple to no longer prohibit app developers from including buttons or links in their apps that direct users to means of paying beside Apple's in-app payment system, which charges a commission to developers.

Apple, which uses its large cash pile to keep court cases going for years rather than change its business model, has asked Rogers to put on hold orders that could require it to change some of its App Store practices and said that it is also appealing the ruling in an antitrust case brought by "Fortnite" creator Epic Games.

Apple’s strategy was seen when Apple would rather take a case to the Supreme court rather than admit that Steve Jobs arranged a cartel with book publishers to raise the cost of ebooks at the expense of Amazon.

In her full 180-page ruling, Gonzalez Rogers expressed concern that developers were being prevented from communicating with iPhone users about alternative prices.

Apple said in Friday's filing that complying with the order could cause it and consumers harm. It said it expects to win an appeal challenging the order and that it wants the legal process, which could last about a year, to play out first.

Epic separately is appealing the judge's finding that Apple has not violated antitrust law through its payment rules.

"The requested stay will allow Apple to protect consumers and safeguard its platform while the company works through the complex and rapidly evolving legal, technological, economic issues", Friday's filing said.

Apple in recent months agreed to loosen other rules about communications between developers and users as part of settlements with developers suing the company and Japan's antitrust regulator.

The company said it has already begun discussing solutions that both satisfy Gonzalez Rogers' request for consumers to be more informed and its desires to keep them protected from scams and continue collecting commissions.

Apple is seeking a hearing with Gonzalez Rogers in early November on its stay request. Epic's opening arguments for its appeal are due Dec. 12.

Apple has said it would keep "Fortnite" off the App Store until all appeals are exhausted, after all there is no reason it should suffer for whistleblowing Apple’s anti-trust antics and getting it to court… oh.

Last modified on 11 October 2021
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