Decided company Camel Apple constantly bans a game Fortnight From its App Store to the game developer, all appeals in the legal battle with Epic Games are over.
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney said on Twitter that the months-long war between the two companies had continued.
California federal judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled earlier this month in an epic game case against Apple that Apple should allow developers to lead customers to third-party payment options and not force them to pay higher fees in the App Store.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Forbes. Sweeney quoted an email sent to Apple last week in which Epic vowed to follow Apple’s guidelines, and said it would send Fortnight back to the Apple Store as soon as Apple allowed external connections. Added.
California federal judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled earlier this month in an epic game case against Apple that Apple should allow developers to lead customers to third-party payment options and not force them to pay higher fees in the App Store.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Sweeney quoted an email he sent to Apple last week.
In it, Epic vowed to follow Apple’s guidelines and said it would send Fortnight back to the Apple Store as soon as Apple allowed it to add external links.
Earlier this month, California federal judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled in an epic game against Apple that it should allow Apple developers to lead customers to third-party payment options.
As well as not having to pay high fees in the App Store to make in-app purchases.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“The need for regulatory and legal action is more apparent than ever,” Sweeney said in a tweet on Twitter on Wednesday.
Apple removed Epic Fortnight from its App Store in August 2020.
This violates Apple’s rules, excluding 30% of Apple’s App Store fees. The company has sued Epic Apple for allegedly abusing its site.
It engaged in anti-competitive practices by allowing only its own payment option in its applications.
Rogers ruled that Apple should allow third-party payment links to apps in the App Store.
But she also ordered a company Epic Pay 30% of the fee you received when submitting your alternative payment method.
In a separate suit, Rogers ruled that Apple was involved in anti-competitive behavior under California’s competitive laws, but did not have anti-monopoly behavior in the gaming market.
Told by the epic. Apple has 90 days from the verdict to allow App-Off payment options through the App Store, before allowing third-party payment options.
Federal appeals can take years to resolve. Epic said it would appeal Rogers’ decision that the App Store did not violate the law of no confidence.
According to Forbes, Apple is examining legal options related to the appeal.
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