- Home
- Technology
- News
Google asks US appeals court to reject app store monopoly verdict
IT giant says judge makes legal errors that unfairly benefited the plaintiff


(Reuters) - Alphabet's Google asked a U.S. appeals court on Wednesday to throw out a jury verdict and a judge's order forcing it to revamp its app store Play.
In its first detailed argument to the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Google said the trial judge made legal errors that unfairly benefited the plaintiff, "Fortnite" maker Epic Games.
Requiring a "dramatic redesign" of Google Play and its mobile-device operating system Android will hurt app developers and consumers, Google said in its court filing.
Epic in a statement on Wednesday said Google was relying on “flawed arguments” that the jury rejected. “This meritless appeal is Google’s desperate attempt to avoid complying with the unanimous jury decision,” Epic said.
Google declined to comment beyond its court filing.
Epic’s 2020 lawsuit accused Google of monopolizing how consumers access apps on Android devices and how they pay for transactions within apps. The Cary, North Carolina-based company persuaded a San Francisco jury last year that Google illegally stifled competition.
Based on the jury's findings, U.S. District Judge James Donato ordered Google in October to let users download rival app stores within Play and make Play's app catalog available to those competitors, among other reforms.
The order, which would bind Google for three years, is on hold pending review in the 9th Circuit.
Google told the appeals court on Wednesday that a jury should never have heard Epic's lawsuit because it sought to enjoin Google's conduct, not collect damages. It said Donato unfairly allowed Epic to tell jurors that Google and Apple (AAPL.O) are not competitors for app distribution and in-app payments.
A U.S. judge on Wednesday said she is considering ordering a federal takeover of New York City's Rikers Island Jail after finding the city failed to improve violent conditions
The filing said Donato was wrong to issue an injunction affecting users and developers nationwide, not just Epic. Google said the order made Donato "a central planner responsible for product design."
The 9th Circuit said it will hear oral arguments on Feb. 3, with a ruling expected later next year.
Spice Girls' debut song 'Wannabe' turns 30 amid reunion talk
- 6 hours ago

The Fitbit Air takes a smarter approach to the AI health dumpster fire
- 18 hours ago
Argentina sings collective happy birthday to Messi
- 6 hours ago

My go-to Kindle is back at its best price yet for Prime Day
- 9 hours ago

9th Muharram-ul-Haraam being observed today; Youm-e-Ashur to be observed on Friday
- 6 hours ago

Who gave AI companies the right to build the future?
- 16 hours ago
Two major earthquakes strike Venezuela, death toll likely to reach thousands
- 6 hours ago

Ninth Muharram processions taken out across country amid tight security
- 2 hours ago
Hormuz traffic sees sharp uptick but not back to normal
- an hour ago

Meta’s smart glasses now have a dedicated charging stand
- 18 hours ago

The shallow authoritarianism of Trump’s Reflecting Pool
- 7 hours ago

The fall of Britain’s prime minister is a warning for America
- 16 hours ago











