Apple responds to Fortnite lawsuit, says Epic fabricated its own emergency - Android

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Apple responds to Fortnite lawsuit, says Epic fabricated its own emergency - Android

Fortnite on iOS

Apple responded to the Epic Games antitrust lawsuit over iOS App Store policies, saying the video game company asked for a “special deal” and fabricated an “emergency” by violating App Store rules. Apple also accused Epic of “putting the entire App Store model at risk.” In a filing, Apple requested the court not temporarily reverse...

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Fortnite on iOS

Apple responded to the Epic Games antitrust lawsuit over iOS App Store policies, saying the video game company asked for a “special deal” and fabricated an “emergency” by violating App Store rules. Apple also accused Epic of “putting the entire App Store model at risk.”

In a filing, Apple requested the court not temporarily reverse the company’s App Store ban on Epic’s Fortnite game. The California-based company also accused Epic of creating an “emergency” for itself by adding a direct payment system to Fortnite, directly violating its App Store rules.

Apple executive Phil Schiller wrote in the filing that Epic CEO Tim Sweeney asked Apple for a “special deal with only Epic” that would “fundamentally change the way in which Epic offers apps on Apple’s iOS platform.” Apple says when it declined, Epic changed its policies to cut Apple out of in-app purchases.

Because of this, Apple argues Epic caused its ban. “In the wake of its own voluntary actions, Epic now seeks emergency relief. But the ‘emergency’ is entirely of Epic’s own making,” says the filing. “Developers who work to deceive Apple, as Epic has done here, are terminated.”

Apple took an opportunity to defend its in-app purchase rules in the filing as well, likening developers avoiding digital checkouts to customers walking out of an Apple retail store with a product they didn’t pay for.

Of course, that defence doesn’t address the numerous apps Epic listed that also offer direct payments and don’t use Apple’s payment processing system. It also doesn’t address that the digital items Apple collects revenue from are not its products.

Apple accused Epic of seeking a special deal, but the company has offered deals to others

As for the special deal, Sweeney previously denied seeking a such an arrangement on Twitter. However, an email shared by CNBC technology reporter Kif Leswing suggests Sweeney petitioned Apple for a partnership that would allow it to offer competing payment processing options and a competing iOS app store called the Epic Games Store. As an aside, it’s worth noting what’s likely a typo in the email mentions “Android customers,” despite the email being directed at Apple executives.