Google loses appeal in antitrust battle with Fortnite maker
[August 02, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court has upheld a jury verdict
condemning Google's Android app store as an illegal monopoly, clearing
the way for a federal judge to enforce a potentially disruptive shakeup
that's designed to give consumers more choices.
The unanimous ruling issued Thursday by the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals delivers a double-barreled legal blow for Google, which has been
waylaid in three separate antitrust trials that resulted in different
pillars of its internet empire being declared as domineering scofflaws
monopolies since late 2023.
The unsuccessful appeal represents a major victory for video game maker
Epic Games, which launched a legal crusade targeting Google’s Play Store
for Android apps and Apple’s iPhone app store nearly five years ago in
an attempt to bypass exclusive payment processing systems that charged
15% to 30% commissions on in-app transactions.
The jury's December 2023 rebuke of Google's app store for
Android-powered smartphones began a cascade of setbacks that includes
monopoly judgements against the company's ubiquitous search engine last
year and the technology underlying its digital ad network earlier this
year.
Although not as lucrative as Google's search engine or ad system, the
Play Store for Android apps has long been a gold mine that generated
billions of dollars in annual revenue by taking a 15% to 30% cut from
in-app transactions funneled through the company's own payment
processing system.
Following a month-long trial, a nine-person jury determined that Google
had rigged its system to thwart alternative app stores from offering
better deals to consumers and software developers. That verdict resulted
in U.S. District Judge James Donato ordering Google to tear down digital
walls shielding the Play Store from competition, triggering the
company's appeal to overturn the jury's finding and void the judge's
mandated shakeup.

But a three-judge panel that heard Google's appeal in February rejected
its lawyers' contention that Donato erred by allowing the case to be
determined by a jury that deviated from the market definition outlined
by another federal judge who mostly sided with Apple in Epic's case
against the iPhone maker's app store.
Epic's lawsuit "was replete with evidence that Google’s anticompetitive
conduct entrenched its dominance, causing the Play Store to benefit from
network effects," the judges wrote in the decision.
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Audience members gather at Made By Google for new product
announcements at Google on Aug. 13, 2024, in Mountain View, Calif.
(AP Photo/Juliana Yamada, File)
 The ruling “will significantly harm
user safety, limit choice, and undermine the innovation that has
always been central to the Android ecosystem,” Google’s vice
president of regulatory affairs Lee-Anne Mulholland said in a
statement.
Unless Google can extend the enforcement delay placed on Donato's
order issued last October, the company will have to begin an
overhaul that includes making the Play Store's entire library of
more than 2 million Android apps available to would-be rivals and
also help distribute the alternative options. Google has argued that
the required revisions will raise privacy and security risks by
exposing consumers to scam artists and hackers masquerading as
legitimate app stores.
But Epic's lawyers have ridiculed Google's warnings about the
changes as scare tactics in a desperate attempt to protect the
fortunes of its corporate parent Alphabet Inc.
Although Epic fell short in its attempt to have the iPhone's app
store declared a monopoly, that case resulted in a judge issuing an
order that required Apple to surrender exclusive control over the
payment processing of in-app transactions and allow links to
alternative systems without collecting a commission.
Besides being hit with Donato's order, Google still faces further
trouble ahead that could leave an even bigger dent in its finances.
As part of the effort to address Google’s illegal monopoly in
search, a federal judge is weighing a proposal by the U.S. Justice
Department that would require the sale of its Chrome web browser and
ban the multibillion dollar deals that company has been making with
Apple and others to lock-in its search engine as the main gateway to
the internet.
Google is also facing a proposed breakup of its advertising
technology as part of the countermeasures to its monopoly in that
business. A trial on that proposal is scheduled to begin in
September.
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