Skip to main content

The judge in Epic v. Apple thinks Apple’s being shady about buttons and links

‘Other than to stifle competition, I see no other answer. Can you give me one?’

‘Other than to stifle competition, I see no other answer. Can you give me one?’

Illustration of the App Store logo in front of a background of gavels.
Illustration of the App Store logo in front of a background of gavels.
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge
Sarah Jeong
is a features editor who publishes award-winning stories about law, tech, and internet subcultures. A journalist trained as a lawyer, she has been writing about tech for 10 years.

Epic Games and Apple are in court for evidentiary hearings for the next couple of weeks over whether Apple violated the anti-steering injunction set down by Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in 2021 after their landmark trial.

These hearings are going to be a lot of nitty-gritty details about App Store guidelines. Today, for example, involves a lot of questioning about buttons. (Apple restricts button styles for links that go outside of their in-app payment system.)

But this interjection, from Judge Rogers, doesn’t look good for Apple:

I can’t imagine a logical reason why Apple would demand that of competitor apps. What’s a logical competitive reason, not for suggesting it, but demanding it? ... Other than to stifle competition, I see no other answer. Can you give me one?

Nobody wants to opine on how a judge is going to rule — especially not based on a stray comment in an evidentiary hearing — but oof.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.