He may be an egomaniac, but in tech companies they're a dime in a dozen. Apple's full of them.
I don't hold any love for any particular corporation, but I for one am siding with Epic on this one. Not for Epic itself but for all the smaller guys they're also fighting for. It's high time digital stores stop taking a 30% cut. It's undeserved and unjustified.
It's ridiculous that Apple has taken probably hundreds of millions of dollars from Fornite IAPs just because they own the platform.
If Epic fails I hope the EU forces Apple to allow third party payment systems for IAPs on iOS.
Personally I would love to see this as the thin end of the wedge to provoke a wider legal investigation over walled-garden ecosystems. That doesn't change the fact that Sweeney is likely going to lose
these specific lawsuits against Apple and Google. They are simple black-and-white cases where EPIC was banned from a platform for meeting the exact condition that was contractually agreed to result in a ban. Contract law is relatively watertight, we've been using contracts to sort shit out legally for a good few millenia now
If Apple and Google's walled gardens are investigated by a governing body, be it US-based or somehing like the European Commission, then this will be a good thing for the "little guys" you're talking about. I agree that the 30% cut is too steep but 70% of something is better than 100% of nothing and the
something is entirely created by and the property of Apple/Google.
Let's fast forward a bit and predict that in 2021 Apple and Google are forced to change their terms or open up the walled garden - someone has to pay for the cloud hosting, the version control, the DRM, the admin of the distribution system. Even if the cut goes down, developers will likely be forced to pay in other ways. The issue is that within the walled gardens, everything is the property of (and the terms and conditions are set by) that walled-garden owner. It's not anti-competitive because Android is open and Windows is open. Other companies are free to make their own app store and distribute apps across that store on Android, Windows, Linux. The only company that is likely to suffer from this is Apple who do not have an open platform and (without jailbreaking) do not allow third-party app stores to run on their devices; That is where the terms '
captive-audience' and '
monopoly' apply, and it's where the regulators are most likely to intervene first.