Akiva Cohen Profile picture
Sep 10, 2021 39 tweets 11 min read Read on X
Huge news in Epic v. Apple, where the judge just ruled for Epic that Apple *must* allow app developers to provide users with non-AppStore purchasing options if they want them, under California unfair competition law - but also that Apple was not a monopolist under anti-trust law
The court also found Epic breached its contract with Apple and is required to pay them millions of dollars. Time for a live-read
The court starts with a recap of the case, and a discussion of the parties' views of the "relevant market." In an antitrust case, the definition of the market can be the ballgame, because whether a defendant has monopoly power may depend on how tightly or widely you zoom in
So: Epic argued that the "relevant market" was "the App Store" - nobody competes with Apple in the "App Store" market, so if the court bought that argument, then Apple would obviously be a monopoly.

Note: This echoes the "Social Media is a Monopoly" argument from the right
Facebook and Twitter and YouTube and so on may be competitors, but Facebook has a monopoly on FB, Twitter on Twitter, etc.

The judge (correctly) rejected that argument.
Apple tried to drive the lens way too far in the other direction, widening it out to the videogame market as a whole, in which Apple is *obviously* not a monopolist (and hell, in which Epic is probably more powerful)
The court rejected both, and zeroed in on a different market: The market for mobile video game transactions. I'm not an anti-trust guy, so maybe my gut instincts are wrong, but I think the judge got this one right
This is going to hurt, btw. Again, I'm not an antitrust guy, so maybe I'm reading this wrong, but it sounds to me like the court is saying it's not convinced Apple *couldn't* be proven to be a monopolist in that narrower market, just that Epic didn't have the evidence for it. And
if that's so, it may well be that Epic's choice to argue for the narrowest possible market is the reason it didn't have that evidence. I'm not familiar with the trial record, so maybe I'm overreading this. But strategy often implicates what evidence you go out and get, and
trial counsel may have been concerned that putting in any evidence about a broader market than "the App Store" might have weakened their chances of getting a finding that the App Store was the relevant market.
That's one hell of a swing-for-the-fences approach, but that's a big part of litigation strategy: do you go for the high-variance play, the one that if it hits you win your case, guaranteed, but may not hit? Or do you make maybe a more solid argument on the relevant market - but
one that will make it much harder to prove monopolistic conduct within that market?

These types of decisions are why GCs and lead partners make the money they do; there are real arguments in either direction, and can be billions of dollars at stake hinging on their judgment
Again, I don't know the trial record, and maybe they did make the fallback argument about the mobile gaming market, and just didn't have the evidence. Let's see as we read through. But I figured it was worth making the broader point about litigation strategy anyway.
Then we get to the meat of the ruling: what the judge found. She isn't kidding about the length, btw - it's 185 pages. No, we won't cover every paragraph, and in fact, let's jump to that outline
Here it is. As you can see, this ruling is ... um ... an epic.

Note also that the judge's eventual ruling on the relevant market seems to come from Apple's evidence on what the market for videogames looks like
But wait, there's more.

Look, this opinion is a beast and I can't spend my whole day on this. I'll put in another hour highlighting stuff I think is relevant, and then have to go back to paying work and prepping for shabbos, and pick this up tomorrow night. OK?
Back to the text, and the court's overview. Back to the swing for the fences thing: 'Breach the contract and then sue' was one hell of a strategy, and I don't know why Epic did it when they could have just sued for a declaratory judgment. Seems needlessly risky
I suppose there's a thought process that says "well, at worst we'll be in the same position after a judgment as we'd be if we just paid under the contract while the case was pending". But that depends on the contract terms, interest rates, & a bunch of other stuff I can't assess
And personally, I just don't like the optics of coming into court and asking for relief while being in active breach of contract terms you agreed to. Atmospherically, I'd rather be saying "this is wrong but we're living under it until we get a ruling saying so"
Again, this is total Monday morning quarterbacking (and from a guy who roots for a team that hasn't had good QB play in forever, so grain of salt, I guess). But ... not the approach I'd have advised
OK, I'm not going to walk you through the court's entire summary of Epic's business and Fortnite, but y'all have to see this
Next the court summarizes Fortnite's freemium economic model

Also ... ugh. Why make this overstatement when it's so easily contradicted?
This probably wasn't going to help their case
Neither was this.
Oh dear.

Look, it's really really hard to get a court to order your adversary to do something you're not doing yourself. But beyond that, why put your credibility at risk to make a claim that's so easily contradicted? I mean, it would be one thing if you had documents backing
your claim that you intended your "Epic Games Store" to be about more than games. Like, lots and lots of documents saying so, and discussing ways to implement that plan. That would be great. But in the absence of that? Just don't make that argument
BTW: Even if it's true. You don't need to inject that into the case; unless I'm missing something (very possible), whether the EGS was intended to include stuff other than games isn't super relevant to the causes of action. So if all you have is undocumented internal thoughts...
why ask the court to make a credibility determination on it?

Again, I'm coming to this ruling cold, Epic had very able lawyers representing them, and they primarily got what they wanted (ability to sell to IOS users without using Apple Pay). So "maybe I'm missing something" isnt
just a rhetorical caveat. I kind of probably am. But ... I don't get this one.
Ah. Comprehension slowly dawns.
Or does it?
So, here's the thing. I get that you want to argue that the Epic Games Store is a competitor that Apple is bodying out of iOS ... but you can make that argument even if EGS is limited to games! You don't have to offer everything the App Store does to compete with it!
This, um, is not a paragraph you want to see in a decision about whether you had a right to breach these terms
So ... about that ... yeah ...
Oh. Ok.

Look, I think this guy, and Zuckerberg, and a whole bunch of these tech bros are vastly, vastly overestimating the market for "virtually sitting in a bar and talking". Like ... guys? I don't need an avatar drinking for me while I converse with someone online
And going by the court's reference to Sweeney's belief as "sincerely held" ...
And with that, we'll break at page 20 and I'll go do some client work and cooking.

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More from @AkivaMCohen

Jun 30, 2023
OK, time to get myself ratioed.

The SCOTUS affirmative action decision was legally wrong - poorly reasoned and legally silly. But in the long run, and if it spurs schools to use socioeconomic status and opportunity as the finger on the scales, it will be a net positive
Race is a blunt instrument, and I think we *all* agree that, for example, Willow Smith doesn't need or warrant any sort of bump on her college application. But Willow Smith is a WILD outlier and "but what about [insert rare exception]" isn't a useful policy framework
So yeah, it was perfectly reasonable for universities to use that blunt instrument.

As many of these university reaction statements are making clear, the burden will now be to find finer instruments that allow for the same intended benefit of taking into account the very real
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This thread from Yesh is a good example of a philosophical mistake I like to call "solutionism" - the belief that if a problem is bad enough then there must be a solution out there to resolve it, because "yeah, it sucks, it can't be solved for" is too unthinkable to bear
You see it a lot in the context of Israel/Palestine, with people convinced that the right mixture of fairy dust & button pushing can lead to a peaceful resolution that addresses all of the important and competing imperatives, it's just that nobody has found the right mixture yet
And we're seeing it with "a large portion of the population is willing to believe any prosecution of crimes by Trump is political"

Yes, that sucks. Yes, that's a potentially society-destroying problem.

No, there isn't a solution
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@yesh222 You don't worry about that, because it's not a solveable problem. You keep doing the right thing and hope that convictions and mounting evidence prevents more people from joining the conspiracy theorists, but that's all you can do
@yesh222 I said this 4 years ago, and it's proven true in every particular.

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That she was the one stealing the bike.

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Like ... how do you determine truth in a they-said-she-said situation? Watch human behavior. Throughout the video, the kids' tone is exactly what you'd expect for someone who believes their own story. Hers very much is not
And when her colleague comes and suggests that the kids get another bike, and they say "no, he paid for that bike, he unlocked it, it's his" there's exactly no reaction of "no, *I* paid for it" or "what the hell", which is what you'd expect if they were lying
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And don't get me wrong - that RICO stuff is big news that should be sending shockwaves through the cheat software industry. Cheatmakers often use resellers. Being found liable on a RICO violation means that every reseller could potentially be liable for 100% of the damage caused
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And by 100%, of course, I mean 300%, since RICO comes with treble damages. Plus attorneys' fees. So that's a big deal.

As is the finding that it's criminal copyright infringement. Those are both new precedents in the area, and that's huge.
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I'm not inclined to forgive antisemitism, but this is more a learning opportunity than a defenestration opportunity. There are people who still legitimately don't understand that "Jew down" or "gyp" are slurs; it's just a phrase they've grown up around and use w/o thought
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The real test will be whether he can learn (& apologize) as he gets more info
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