Ottawa Citizen

Apple says Epic Games sought ‘side’ deal on Fortnite fee

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Apple Inc. fired back at Epic Games Inc. in their fight over the iPhone maker’s app fees, saying the game developer’s boss sought a special “side” deal that would fundamenta­lly upend how the App Store works.

“Having decided that it would rather enjoy the benefits of the App Store without paying for them, Epic has breached its contracts with Apple, using its own customers and Apple’s users as leverage,” Apple said in a court filing Friday.

Epic is set to ask a federal court on Monday to force Apple to restore the Fortnite app to the App Store, and block the company from cutting off Epic’s developer tools and limiting its ability to provide key graphics technology to other apps. Apple is urging a judge in Oakland, California, to reject Epic’s request.

The dispute is shaping up into a major antitrust showdown as friction between developers and Apple has been building for more than a year. Developers have been increasing­ly calling out Apple’s App Store fee policies and rules, complainin­g they are unfair and only benefit the company’s own services. Of the 2.2 million apps available on the App Store, the 30 per cent fee is billed to more than 350,000. Apple reduces the fee to 15 per cent for subscripti­ons after a user signs up for more than a year.

Apple said Epic created a “hot mess” by offering customers a way to directly buy items for Fortnite and circumvent the App Store fees. Apple said it won’t bend its rules for Epic.

Epic chief executive Tim Sweeney emailed Apple on June 30 seeking to set up its own competing Epic Games Store app through the App Store, according to Apple’s filing. Despite being told that “Apple has never allowed this,” Epic went ahead and launched its own storefront on Aug. 13, Apple said.

Phil Schiller, head of Apple’s App Store, said in the filing that “Sweeney’s pronouncem­ent undid one of the most fundamenta­l terms of the business relationsh­ip that had existed between the parties for many years.”

“If tolerated, Epic’s unilateral and ongoing breach of its contractua­l commitment­s will send giant ripples across the entire App Store business model and ecosystem to the detriment of not only Apple, but also the users and developers who depend on the integrity and security of the App Store,” Schiller said.

Sweeney took to Twitter Friday to defend his position.

Spotify also has been sparring with Apple, and this week news publishers confronted chief executive Tim Cook over why they can’t qualify for a discounted fee — 15 per cent — that Amazon.com Inc. gets for its Prime video app.

Match Group Inc., operator of many popular online dating apps, said it’s backing Epic but has stopped short of joining the court fight.

 ?? CHRIS DELMAS / AFP ?? Fortnite developer Epic Games is in a court battle with Apple over its app fees.
CHRIS DELMAS / AFP Fortnite developer Epic Games is in a court battle with Apple over its app fees.

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