So Epic games sued Google for their play store and won. Is Steam next? Kinda funny when Epic was finding ways to appeal to devs for exclusive rights to games on their platform, stealing many away from Steam..*cough* Ooblets... kinda feel this is just some weird legal route of destroying competition, when they have been doing the exact same thing and it kinda seems dirty.
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To find an intelligent person in a PUG is not that rare, but to find a PUG made up of "all" intelligent people is one of the rarest phenomenons in the known universe.
Anyway, this lawsuit doesn't even make sense. You're paying apple to only list safe apps. You pay google to give you an audience. What am I missing?
I think epic is looking a way to make their money back from this:
The Federal Trade Commission has secured agreements requiring Epic Games, Inc., creator of the popular video game Fortnite, to pay a total of $520 million in relief over allegations the company violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and deployed design tricks, known as dark patterns, to dupe millions of players into making unintentional purchases.
Someone who is registered as being a flex offender is a person who feels the need to flex about everything they say.
Always be the guy that paints the house in the dark.
Lucidity can be forged with enough liquidity and pharmed for decades with enough compound interest that a reachable profit would never end.
Google and Apple have massive monopolies and they abuse that power. I wish it was someone other than epic winning it though.
The jury found Google guilty of this behaviour and it's part of the ruling, including the finding that Epic was injured as a result of this behaviour (i.e. Google taking a cut out of Fortnite in-app sales).
It's pretty wild, to be honest, 5-0 victory for Epic. Google lost on every single count. I don't even remember such high-profile case with such a clear outcome:
All in all, a pretty remarkable verdict. Google will appeal, of course. The million dollar question (or perhaps the 100-billion dollar question) is how will this be remedied by the courts, especially given that this anti-competitive behaviour goes back many years during which time Google had always been in breach of the antitrust law and countless other entities doing business through Google Play have been affected.
If Google loses its appeal, I wouldn't be surprised to see a follow-up class action lawsuit against Google, grouping thousands of small developers who used in-app purchases and Google took a cut out of their revenues. It will be interesting to watch.
If so where is the documentation on how consumers were injured by Google's practices, because as one I'm not so sure I have been.
I actually don't care if Epic has been injured, that doesn't seem to have hurt me, the consumer either considering they are giving away free games left and right.
Epic however has "hurt" me in their attempts to force me to use their service by signing game developers to exclusive deals, blocking me from purchasing games on the platform of my choice.
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Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm
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"This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon
I think it's a problem of outdated legislation being applied to something it was never designed for. This is a case where legislators should make a new law on how platforms like Android and IOS must behave, instead of courts trying to apply existing laws.
Since this rejection of Apple's appeal means the earlier decision stands, including the verdict on several counts concerning Apple's illegal behaviour, it will be interesting to see what legal action will follow. I would bet there are already lawyers preparing campaigns to get devs to file class-action against Apple.