A US judge on Friday ordered Apple to loosen control of its App Store, barring it from obliging developers to use its payments system, in a high-profile antitrust case brought by Fortnite maker Epic Games.
Epic launched the case aiming to break Apple’s grip on the App Store, and the ruling could have far-reaching consequences across the digital economy.
Friday’s order says Apple is permanently barred from prohibiting developers from including in their apps “external links or other calls to action that direct customers to purchasing mechanisms.”
Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers wrote that Apple violated California’s laws against unfair competition but that it was not “an anti-trust monopolist… for mobile gaming transactions.”
The two firms clashed over whether Apple has the right to set ground rules, control payment systems and kick out apps from its marketplace that fail to comply.
Also at stake was Apple’s slice of revenue from iPhone apps of as much as 30 percent.
Apple booted Fortnite from its online mobile marketplace after Epic released an update that dodged revenue sharing with the iPhone maker.
Apple does not allow users of its popular devices to download apps from anywhere but its App Store.
The case in a California federal court came with Apple feeling pressure from a wide range of app makers over its control of the App Store, which critics say represents monopolistic behavior.
 ‘Fighting for fair competition’Â
Apple, in an initial reaction, welcomed the ruling but Epic Games founder said the decision did not go far enough.
“Today the Court has affirmed what we’ve known all along: the App Store is not in violation of antitrust law,” the iPhone maker said in a statement.
“As the Court recognized ‘success is not illegal.'”
Apps are only allowed onto Apple mobile devices through the App Store, which requires them to abide by rules for privacy and security
Apps are only allowed onto Apple mobile devices through the App Store, which requires them to abide by rules for privacy and security Josh Edelson AFP/File
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney said the ruling was not a “win for developers or for consumers.”
“Epic is fighting for fair competition among in-app payment methods and app stores for a billion consumers,” he tweeted.
Apple opened its App Store in July 2008, a year after the release of the first iPhone.
The shop, stocked with mobile apps tailored for devices powered by iOS mobile software, was quickly imitated by rival smartphone makers.
It ignited an entire economy where developers big or small could make money with “an app for that,” from games or social networking to summoning car rides or ordering food.
The App Store — the lone gateway onto the more than one billion iPhones in use around the world — has grown to include more than 1.8 million apps.
Hundreds of billions of dollars in transactions take place at the App Store each year in what Apple chief Cook has called an “economic miracle.”