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Epic Games, the company behind the popular online game Fortnite, on Tuesday won a partial victory in an Australian court. The case was brought by U.S. billionaire chief executive Tim Sweeney, who claimed that Google and Apple engaged in anti-competitive conduct in running their app stores.
Fortnite is returning to Australians after a court decision said Google and Apple's dominance over the digital marketplace was anticompetitive.
An Australian court has found that Apple Inc. and Google LLC breached local competition laws with their respective app stores.
An Australian court found the smartphone app stores of Apple and Google-owned Android were uncompetitive, local media reported on Tuesday, in a partial victory for Fortnite game developer Epic Games against the tech giants.
Per the analysts, Alphabet's breakup value could be as much as $304 per share. That represents a more than 54% premium to the current GOOG stock price. On the other hand, Apple could lose a little or a lot from this pending decision.
In a new Pixel 10 ad, Google dunks on Apple’s failed promise of Siri AI improvements, with a narrator that suggests you could “just change your phone” if you bought “a new phone because of a feature that’s coming soon, but it’s been coming soon for a full year.”
Google has released a new teaser video for the Pixel 10 series. The ad takes a not-too-subtle jab at rival Apple.
Epic Games gets to celebrate another good day in court after a new ruling in Australia states that Fortnite is coming back to the App store.
The most popular navigation apps help millions of drivers reach their destinations daily. How do Google Maps, Apple Maps and Waze compare?
Apple is increasing its U.S. spending plans from $500 billion to $600 billion, although this figure is a bit misleading.
Commentary: The Apple Watch and AirPods can lead the way in Apple's AI comeback — that is, if those Siri reports are true.
With the iPhone 17 Pro, it seems Apple is going straight for the summit of long-range photo capture by smartphone cameras.