On Monday, a jury sided with Epic Games over Google in an antitrust case that could reshape how app marketplaces like Google Play are allowed to operate.
The unanimous verdict wraps up a three-year-long legal battle between the companies. Epic, creator of the popular online multiplayer game Fortnite, first filed its lawsuit against Google in 2020 alleging that the tech giant’s app store practices violated federal and California state antitrust laws.
The lawsuit against Google was just one piece of Epic’s flashy effort to rally app developers large and small against mobile software’s entrenched gatekeepers. Epic’s war against Apple and Google centers around its hit game Fortnite, which is free-to-play and available on nearly every software platform imaginable, current App Store and Google Play drama notwithstanding.
Epic argues that both tech giants violate antitrust laws by forcing app users to make payments through their own systems and taking a significant cut of in-app revenues in the process. In their defense, Apple and Google generally point to concerns around security to justify their shared desire to steer app users toward a central software authority.
What to know about Fortnite maker Epic Games’ antitrust battle with Google, starting today
Apple and Google do differ in their handling of third party apps — iOS doesn’t allow them while Android permits “sideloading” apps — a fact that changed the shape of Epic’s battle against Google. Still, Google cautions customers against installing external apps and the process isn’t nearly as straightforward as simply downloading something on Google Play.
On the face of those facts, it wasn’t obvious that Epic would prevail in its case against Google Play’s relatively less
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