Zen@biglemmowski.win to Technology@beehaw.orgEnglish · 8 months agoApple's Epic ban is questioned by EU regulators; more details9to5mac.comexternal-linkmessage-square1fedilinkarrow-up135arrow-down10
arrow-up135arrow-down1external-linkApple's Epic ban is questioned by EU regulators; more details9to5mac.comZen@biglemmowski.win to Technology@beehaw.orgEnglish · 8 months agomessage-square1fedilink
minus-squaremasterspace@lemmy.calinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up36·edit-28 months ago The story so far Epic Games introduced its own in-app payment system on iPhone which takes a 3% cut of revenue, the same as on Android, Windows, and MacOS This bypassed the App Store, and denied Apple its 30% commission cut of revenue This was a blatant breach of App Store terms & conditions Apple responded by throwing the company off the App Store The two companies went to court in the US The US court told Epic that, no, Apple did not operate a monopoly according to famously narrow US antitrust precedent The US court told Apple that, yes, it must allow app sales outside the App Store Both sides appealed the parts of the ruling they didn’t like The Republican stacked US Supreme Court declined to hear either appeal Meantime, the EU Digital Markets Act also required third-party app stores Apple agreed to comply in both the US and EU the EU But it imposed terms which have been described as malicious compliance Fixed that for you, 9-5 Mac.
Fixed that for you, 9-5 Mac.