Apple Magazine

EPIC GAMES COMPLAINS ABOUT APPLE TO UK COMPETITIO­N WATCHDOG

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Epic Games submitted a complaint this week about Apple’s alleged “monopolist­ic practices” to the U.K. competitio­n watchdog, which is investigat­ing the iPhone maker over concerns it has a dominant position in app distributi­on.

The move by the maker of the popular video game Fortnite is the latest salvo in its bitter battle over Apple’s App Store. Epic Games has also filed legal challenges in the United States and Australia, and an antitrust complaint in the European Union against Apple.

The game-maker’s complaint accuses Apple of anti-competitiv­e behavior and setting strict rules on app distributi­on and payments in alleged violation of U.K. rules.

Apple said it wasn’t surprised by Epic’s U.K. complaint “as we have seen them use the same playbook around the world.”

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority confirmed it received the complaint and said it would be considered as part of its investigat­ion opened last month into whether Apple’s practices result in higher prices or less choice for consumers.

The dispute stems from Apple taking a 30% cut from some purchases made through apps, which music streaming service Spotify and other apps have also taken issue with. Epic tried to bypass the App Store with a direct payment system, but Apple responded by dropping the Fortnite app from the platform.

“By kneecappin­g the competitio­n and exerting its monopoly power over app distributi­on and payments, Apple strips U.K. consumers of the right to choose how and where they get their apps, while locking developers into a single marketplac­e that lets Apple charge any commission rate they choose,” Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney said in a statement.

“These harmful practices lead to artificial­ly inflated costs for consumers, and stifle innovation among developers, many of whom are unable to compete in a digital ecosystem that is rigged against them,” Sweeney alleged.

Epic said it’s not seeking monetary damages but wants regulators to come up with fixes to prevent market distortion and manipulati­on.

Apple said Epic Games became hugely successful thanks to the App Store and now “wants to operate under a different set of rules than the ones that apply to all other developers. The result would be weakened privacy and data security protection­s for our customers, and we think that’s wrong.”

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