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A U.S. judge has found Apple intentionally violated a court order prohibiting it from anti-competitive conduct. Held in civil contempt of court, the tech giant is also facing an investigation for ...
Epic Games told the court in March 2024 that Apple was “blatantly” violating the court’s order, including by imposing a new 27% fee on app developers when Apple customers complete an app ...
Apple had denied violating terms of the court’s order. On top of finding Apple took steps to evade her injunction, Gonzalez Rogers referred Apple and one of its executives to federal prosecutors ...
Apple had denied violating terms of the court’s order. Apple and Epic Games did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Apple's appeal notice did include its planned legal arguments.
Epic Games, developer of Fortnite, sued Apple in 2020 over the restrictions and fees imposed by its iPhone App Store - Dado Ruvic/Reuters Apple has been referred to federal prosecutors after a ...
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers excoriated Apple for willfully violating her 2021 decision ... An appellate court upheld this order, which went into effect after the U.S. Supreme ...
(AP PHOTO) Apple in a statement said "we strongly disagree with the decision. We will comply with the court's order and we will appeal." Epic Games chief executive Tim Sweeney called the judge's order ...
Apple had denied violating terms of the court’s order. WHY DID THE JUDGE MAKE A CRIMINAL CONTEMPT REFERRAL? On top of finding Apple took steps to evade her injunction, Gonzalez Rogers referred ...
Epic Games told the court in March 2024 that Apple was “blatantly” violating the court’s order, including by imposing a new 27% fee on app developers when Apple customers complete an app ...