Fortnite Creator Epic Games Asks Court to Prevent What It Describes as Apple's 'Retaliation'
Fortnite Creator Epic Games Asks Court to Prevent What It Describes as Apple's 'Retaliation' 3o5i4a
Late last week, Apple terminated Epic Games' on its App Store. 415g6h
By Reuters | Updated: 5 September 2020 18:46 IST
iPhone s are not able to Fortnite or other Epic titles through the Apple App Store 213lx
Highlights
Epic Games is "likely to suffer irreparable harm" due to Apple's ban
Epic Games filed for a preliminary injunction to reinstate Fortnite
The filing described the iPhone maker as a "monopolist"
ment
Epic Games said late on Friday that it has asked a court to stop what it saw as Apple Inc's retaliation against the Fortnite creator after the iPhone maker terminated Epic Games' on its App Store. Epic Games filed for a preliminary injunction that would put its game back in the App Store and restore its developer . The filing was made in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
It argued that Epic Games is "likely to suffer irreparable harm" in the absence of a preliminary injunction and that "the balance of harms tips sharply in Epic's favor".
The filing described the iPhone maker as a "monopolist" that maintains its monopolies by "explicitly prohibiting any competitive entry".
"This was a clear warning to any other developer that would dare challenge Apple's monopolies: follow our rules or we will cut you off from a billion iOS consumers - challenge us and we will destroy your business," Epic Games said in Friday's filing.
Apple pulled Epic Games after the popular games creator implemented a feature to let iPhone s make in-app purchases directly, rather than using Apple's in-app purchase system, which charges commissions of 30%.
Apple had said it would allow Fortnite back into the store if Epic removed the direct payment feature. But Epic refused to do so, saying complying with Apple's request would be "to collude with Apple to maintain their monopoly over in-app payments on iOS."
Should the government explain why Chinese apps were banned? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, the episode, or just hit the play button below.
links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.