When you get a job you sign an offer and get paid X, after realizing the company makes your X times 100000 you want 2X, you have two options. Renegotiate or quit. You can't just stop doing work unless you want to get fired.
Epic wants to renegotiate, Appl wants no part of that and Epic doesn't want to quit, because they know Apple is a huge revenue stream for them.
Actually, Epic did this because they want to renegotiate their contracts with the game console makers, and they know that Apple isn't a huge percentage of their revenue. They went after Apple because suing them would cost them a smaller part of their revenue if Apple threw them off the iOS App Store than if they did it to Sony or Microsoft.
So Apple should provide the App Store out the goodness of their heart?
Hardly. The iPhone is popular because the apps exist. Apple should provide the app store because, given Apple's unwillingness to allow third-party stores, providing the app store is a cost of doing business.
As it stands developers benefit from the App Store as does consumers and so does Apple seems to benefit all involved
The thing is, everything that Apple has done, when examined in isolation, looks fine. It's only the combination of those actions that is a problem. For example, Apple allowing apps to be on the store without a fee (beyond the $99 annual developer program membership) is a good thing at first glance. But because they did that, there was no incentive to provide any alternative means of allowing free apps onto the devices. If other app installation mechanisms existed, then no one would object to the App Store having that 30% rule.
But I'm not sure I agree with your assertion that consumers benefit from the iOS App Store. Consumers clearly benefit from installing apps onto their devices. But I'm unconvinced that consumers benefit from the curated store that Apple provides.
Ask yourself this: If a curated store is such a big benefit, why isn't the Mac App Store immensely popular, rather than an almost complete failure? Is there something magical about mobile devices that makes people unable to go to a developer's website, tap a link, and download and install the app from there?
Similarly, the App Store clearly does not benefit most developers. Developers would have more control without Apple's review process. They would not have to give Apple a cut of sales from products sold directly (and would pay a lower fee if there were competing payment processors). They would not be any more discoverable than they are now, because there have been websites that talk about new software and provide links to them since long before Apple even thought about creating an App Store. Some of them even do virus scans and other basic safety testing.
No, the iOS App Store benefits Apple, period. Anybody arguing otherwise hasn't seriously considered the alternatives, and is just assuming that the alternative is "no apps".
And this is why the counter-suit is necessary. Epic had all of this prepared. They KNEW they were going to break the contract and this would happen. If they KNEW it would happen, they can't claim "Ohhhh Apple is making our company lose sales and its harming us"
No, they knew that there was a possibility that Apple could react in this way. I suspect that they assumed that their game was too popular, and that Apple would never be crazy enough to actually kick them off the store, but they made preparations just in case the worst-case scenario happened. So when it did, they were prepared.
I have to say if Apple loses this and other companies can make competing stores on the iPhone it will really be a double edged sword for us as consumers.
On the one hand we would get software with features Apple won't allow on their own store and competition on price. On the other hand we will have to at some point install third party stores that may have a poorer user experience compared to the built in App Store or stores that allow apps which don't respect our privacy.
Users that care about privacy would be under no obligation to install a third-party store. Having options is almost never bad. And if, in the end, nobody puts their apps in Apple's store because it is too restrictive, then I guess the market has spoken, but I don't for even one minute think that this will occur. The iPhone is too popular, at least in the U.S., precisely because of Apple's commitment to privacy and security.
I would disagree. iPhones and iPads are sold at a loss if they are expected to pay for all the R&D needed to build them to the standard Apple has made them so far. They need to pay for not only the devices hardware and OS but also for development tools, and for other services that add to the devices value. Like the Apple TV, which can not possibly make enough in hardware sales to pay for iteself and which relies on services like the App Store to pay for it.
The Apple TV? Are you kidding me? The R&D cost for Apple TV is remarkably close to zero. The OS is basically a subset of iOS. The hardware is basically an iPad without the screen, just with a different board layout and an internal power supply. Nearly everything in an Apple TV that was designed by Apple was originally designed for use in some other device. As a percentage of Apple's iOS R&D costs, the portion spent on Apple TV is lost in the noise.
The Apple TV 4K starts at $180, and the hardware, including manufacturing, is estimated to cost less than $65 (and that may be an overestimate). So they bring in $115 per unit times O(60 million) units to cover their RD costs. For it to lose money would mean that the engineers required to do a new board layout every couple of years and maintain whatever shell script strips the iOS build into a tvOS build would have to add up to seven billion dollars per year.
For reference, Apple's total annual R&D costs for iOS, tvOS, macOS, Mac hardware, iPhone hardware, iPod hardware, iPad Hardware, and Apple TV hardware put together were only $16 billion dollars last year.
So yes, the Apple TV pays for itself. By a large margin. It would still pay for itself at $99. It might even pay for itself at $75. Of all the products Apple makes, nothing is closer to being pure profit than the Apple TV.