Apple Disputes Australian Court Finding of iOS App Store Monopoly in Epic Games Battle - MacRumors
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Apple Disputes Australian Court Finding of iOS App Store Monopoly in Epic Games Battle

Apple and Epic Games have been involved in a high-profile legal battle in the United States, but the two companies have also been facing off in court in Australia. Back in August, Australia's federal court ruled that the Apple App Store had violated competition laws by prohibiting sideloading and alternative payment methods.

app store blue banner epic 1
At the time, the court had not shared a written judgment, but now the 900-page document has been published and additional information on the court's decision is available. In a statement to MacRumors, Apple said that it does not agree with the court's decision and will continue to argue its position in court.

Apple does not have a monopoly position in Australia or in any market around the world. We strongly disagree with many decisions in this case, including an improper market definition that has been rejected by other courts. We will continue to seek an outcome that respects our intellectual property and protects the safe, secure experience that consumers and developers have come to expect from the App Store.

In the Australia case, Epic argued that Apple misused market power by limiting app distribution to the ‌App Store‌, requiring apps to use in-app purchase for digital content, and blocking competition by prohibiting alternative app stores and payment methods.

The court adopted a narrow definition of the markets in play, viewing iOS as its own ecosystem and concluding that Apple has a monopoly over iOS app distribution and in-app payment processing. Apple doesn't have to make any changes yet, but the court did not look favorably on Apple's rules against sideloading and third-party payments.

Apple believes that viewing the iPhone as a single brand market is inappropriate, because it faces competition from other platforms like the Google Play Store, the Samsung Galaxy Store, and stores that allow for software purchases on PCs and consoles. Other courts, including the U.S. court overseeing the ‌Epic Games‌ v. Apple case, have not used that market definition.

The Australian court used Europe's Digital Markets Act as evidence that alternative app distribution is possible, but Apple says that the viewpoint ignores the risks associated with skirting the ‌App Store‌'s security and privacy protections. It is Apple's position that sideloading risks malware, fraud, and viruses, and subjects users to questionable content because there are few restrictions. Sideloading could also diminish the trust that people have in the iPhone, and Apple says that relying on the DMA is a mistake because the DMA hasn't been around long enough to demonstrate the full effects of weakened security.

Epic did not score a total victory in Australia. The court said that Apple is well within its rights to charge for its intellectual property, found that Apple's refusal to support third-party app stores is justified, and acknowledged the privacy and security protections provided by the ‌App Store‌.

Remedies to address Apple's alleged anticompetitive conduct have not yet been determined and Apple hasn't been ordered to make changes, but after the ruling, ‌Epic Games‌ claimed that Fortnite would be returning to iOS in Australia.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

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Top Rated Comments

7 months ago
Android having more marketshare and Apple is a monopoly?

clowns.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
TracesOfArsenic Avatar
7 months ago
Gee, I wonder why Apple didn't agree? Funny that every jurisdiction is independently coming to the same conclusion on Apple's strong-armed business practice yet "they're doing nothing wrong".
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
The problem here is that when I buy an iPhone, even though I paid for it, it is not really mine because I can only install Apps that Apple approves of.

Kind of like buying a car and only being able to drive it to certain locations approved by the car manufacturer. Of course, the car manufacturer would be protecting the safety of kids so that is alright? No! No one would accept that. And there is no reason to accept Apple's shared ownership claim of the phone I purchased.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
Epic is a monopoly too. We can’t sell skins in their store. That should be open.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
The courts there are basically saying “Apple has a monopoly because it controls iOS and iOS is its own market”. That's circular reasoning. While such reasoning might be legally tenable in Australia, are the judges making these rulings willing to apply that reasoning to all businesses? Do IGA or Woolworths have a monopoly on what they sell in their stores?

I understand that there really are only two options with smartphones -- iOS and Android -- which is different than some other business situations, but applying a narrow interpretation of a monopoly and using circular reasoning to do so is questionable.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
AppliedMicro Avatar
7 months ago

iOS as a market. Well that’s a definition I suppose. And quite a novel one as this would be the first time a market for the purposes of monopoly definition has included the name of a company’s product/service
When that company's [S]service[/S] platform forms a duopoly (along with Android), that is entirely warranted.

You certainly don't have to look at it as Apple's (or Google's) product.
You can very well look at iOS and Android as two operating system "standards" that included certain APIs and services that determine which apps can run on them. Just like Linux.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)