Microsoft, Justice Dept., 35 states accuse Apple of hurting competition in Epic Games fight

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The Justice Department, 35 state attorneys general and Microsoft are accusing Apple of hurting competition in amicus briefs filed Friday.

The briefs come in response to Fortnite creator Epic Games’ ongoing legal battle with Apple over the tech giant’s app store policies that began in 2020.

“Apple’s conduct has harmed and is harming mobile app developers and millions of citizens within the [states’] boundaries,” the state attorney generals’ brief led by Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes states. “Meanwhile, Apple continues to monopolize app-distribution and in-app payment solutions for iPhones, stifle competition, and amass supracompetitive profits within the almost trillion-dollar-a-year smartphone industry.”

This illustration picture shows a person logging into Epic Games’ Fortnite on their smartphone in Los Angeles on August 14, 2020. (Photo by CHRIS DELMAS/AFP via Getty Images)

The complaint added that “Apple must account for its conduct under a complete rule of reason analysis.”

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Epic Games’ lawsuit against Apple began when it announced plans to implement its own in-app payment system in Fortnite last year to avoid paying Apple a commission fee of up to 30%.

In response to the move, Apple removed Fortnite from its app store and restricted access to its iOS developer account. Epic fired back with an antitrust lawsuit, accusing Apple of using its app store to stifle competition and maintain a monopoly over the app market. 

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 20: iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro models are displayed as customers shop at Apple's flagship 5th Avenue store on September 20, 2019 in New York City. Apple's new iPhone 11 goes on sale today at the grand re-opening of the 5th Avenue store. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro models are displayed as customers shop at Apple’s flagship 5th Avenue store on September 20, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The briefs filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit back Epic Games’ recent appeal against a ruling in Oakland, California, district court. The ruling found Apple’s commission fees were not anti-competitive, but that the tech giant did engage in some anti-competitive behavior under California’s Unfair Competition law.

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The 35 attorneys general, Justice Department and Microsoft are now urging a reconsideration of its ruling as it related to the Sherman Act.

“The district court committed several legal errors that could imperil effective antitrust enforcement, especially in the digital economy,” the Justice Department said in its brief. “The court read Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act narrowly and wrongly, in ways that would leave many anticompetitive agreements and practices outside their protections.”

Gamers play the video game ‘fortnite’ developed by Epic Games on a laptop from the Razer company during the ‘Paris Games Week’ on October 25, 2018 in Paris, France. (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)

The Justice Department also described the district court’s opinion as “ambiguous.”

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Microsoft also filed a brief stating that if “Apple is allowed to step between any company with online services and users of iPhones, few areas of the vast mobile economy will be safe from Apple’s interference and eventual dominance,” as The New York Post reported.

“Consumers and innovation will suffer — indeed, they already have,” the company said, adding that the “district court’s reasoning failed to give sufficient weight to these immense competitive risks and, if broadly affirmed, could insulate Apple from meritorious antitrust scrutiny and embolden further harmful conduct.”

Apple’s stock price climbed more than 3.5% in after-hours trading following the release of its highest quarterly revenue increase in the company’s history on Thursday at $123.9 billion. In early January, the tech behemoth became the first U.S. company to hit $3 trillion in market value. Microsoft was valued at around $2.5 trillion at the time.

FOX Business’s Lucas Manfredi and Breck Dumas contributed to this report.

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