On Monday, Apple filed an appeal with the Ninth Circuit, contesting last week’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers that bars the company from imposing fees on developers who include purchase links outside the App Store. The company was also hit with a class-action lawsuit over violating that App Store ruling.
Gonzalez Rogers ordered Apple to allow developers to advertise lower prices elsewhere within Apple’s App Store for free. It is Apple’s App Store. The company owns it, not Epic Games or some ditzy U.S. District Judge. Advertising within Apple’s App Store has value, a fee for which its owner has every right to charge, regardless of whatever the blank-eyed Gonzalez Rogers, bless her heart, expected. In communist China, the CCP can set prices for Chinese companies. You’re in the wrong country, Yvonne. Apple should appeal this rolling travesty all the way to the United States Supreme Court, if need be. Rodgers says that Apple will no longer be allowed to prohibit developers from providing links or other communications that direct users away from Apple in-app purchasing. You know, because Best Buy and Target are forced by a judge’s injunction to place signs next to each product that advertise lower prices for the same items at Walmart. Oh, wait, they aren’t forced to do that by some ditzy judge. Because it’s ludicrous, illogical, and just plan wrong. Apple should appeal Roger’s injunction and/or if developers like Epic Games want to advertise lower prices using Apple’s App Store, Apple should simply charge an in-store advertising fee. We suggest it be 15% for developers making under $1 million per year and 30% for those making $1 million or more annually. – MacDailyNews, September 10, 2021 Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon. The post Apple hit with class-action lawsuit for violating App Store injunction appeared first on MacDailyNews. You're currently a free subscriber to MacDailyNews. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Monday, May 5, 2025
Apple hit with class-action lawsuit for violating App Store injunction
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