Apple CEO Tim Cook testified on Friday in a trial over whether Apple is abusing its market power, and the judge did not come to play.
Cook appeared in court in person and answered questions from Apple's lawyers, attorneys for Epic Games — the maker of the video game Fortnite, which is suing Apple — and U.S. District Court Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers.
Cook spent much of his roughly five hours on the witness stand defending his company's policies, which require that apps meet certain guidelines set by Apple in order to be made available on the App Store — the only way iOS users can download an app. Epic wants to be able to run its own app store on the iPhone, partially because they'd like to avoid the up to 30% commissions Apple takes on App Store transactions.
Cook's time on the stand rounded out a three-week-long trial that will end with Judge Gonzalez Rogers decision on if Apple has too much power, or if it's just participating in some friendly competition, but we won't get that answer today.
Although Cook was a fascinating witness, at one point saying on record that he simply is "not a gamer," the real star of Friday's show was Judge Gonzalez Rogers.
Judge Gonzalez Rogers absolutely came for Cook. She focused largely on how games make up the vast majority of transactions on Apple's App store. She said Apple created a "lucrative" system that is "a choice of a model," not something Apple had to do in order to serve their customers, and contrasted how Apple treats gaming apps to how it treats banking apps.
"You don’t charge Wells Fargo or Bank of America, right?" Judge Gonzalez Rogers said. "But you’re charging gamers to subsidize Wells Fargo."
In response, Cook said: "In the gamers example, they’re transacting on our platform."
"People are doing lots of things on your platform," the judge said. Then, she went after Apple's new Small Business Program, a program introduced in November in which Apple reduced App Store commission from 30% to 15% for small businesses earning up to $1 million per year, according to Apple's website. She said the program "really wasn’t the result of competition. That seemed to be a result of the pressure you’re feeling from investigation [and] lawsuits, not competition."
"It was the result of feeling like we should do something from a COVID point of view, and then electing instead of doing something temporary to do something permanent," Cook said in response.
"It wasn't competition," the Judge said.
And the judge wasn't done. Gonzalez Rogers then turned to a survey that showed 39% of all Apple developers are dissatisfied.
"It doesn’t seem you feel any pressure or competition to change the way that you act to address the concerns of developers," she said. "You don’t recall seeing any other surveys or business records showing that you routinely conduct surveys?"
Cook said he didn't know but that another executive, Phil Schiller, might. Gonzalez Rogers asked if he, as CEO, received reports on the satisfaction of his developers. Cook simply answered that he does not.
And just like that, the testimony went into a closed session for the remainder of Cook's time on the stand, meaning the media was kicked out.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Apple CEO Tim Cook gets lightly roasted by judge in 'Fortnite' trial-口沸目赤网
sitemap
文章
63162
浏览
72
获赞
19
David Harbour recreated THAT scene from 'The Shining' and it's frankly terrifying
All work and no play makes David Harbour the terrifying star of his own version of The Shining.The STaylor Swift endorses Kamala Harris after presidential debate
Everyone's favorite childless cat lady, Taylor Swift, took to Instagram on Sept. 10 to endorse ViceWhat to know about storing 'verifiable' COVID vaccine records in your Apple Wallet
Call it the vaccine card shuffle. Walk up to a restaurant or prepare to enter a sports arena or concSingapore has patrol robots now! This should be fine.
Some robots were made to be your best friend. Some to unload 1600 boxes an hour. Some to do backflipDid Trump forget about his TikTok ban? TikTok would like to know.
President Trump has been very busy with his re-election campaign and, of late, dubious legal challenBest Prime Day camera deals: Kodak, GoPro, more
Perhaps photo dumps aren't scratching the same in-the-moment itch that they once were, or maybe yourTikTok is shipping Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, which could mean nothing
All good things come in pairs. Spaghetti andmeatballs. Peanut butter andjelly. Matt Damon and... YouBest 4th of July kitchen deals of 2024
GET UP TO $100 OFF: As of July 1, score up to $100 off cookware, appliances, and gadgets from Le CreBoomers killed the Facebook status
Few leisure activities bring boomers more satisfaction than complaining about millennials, but usingHow to get followers on Twitter
It's the age-old social media question: How do I get more followers on Twitter?The truth is, there iTinder, Bumble, Hinge: major dating apps are becoming alike
Last month, the dating appBumble — which was known for allowing only women to message first inBest outdoor deals: Save on paddleboards, tents, and beach chairs
While back-to-school shopping has already begun, don't let it put a ticking clock on your summer. ThPeople can't get over Trump putting a candy bar on a kid's head dressed as a Minion
Everything was going relatively smoothly for Halloween 2019 at the White House until one kid dressedBest 4th of July sale deals: Best outdoor deals
The 4th of July is finally here, which means all of the best 4th of July sales are officially in fulHow to get followers on Twitter
It's the age-old social media question: How do I get more followers on Twitter?The truth is, there i