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You continue keyboard spray to hide the fact that you originally quoted sections of the App Guidelines document while referring to it as the developer agreement - which was blatantly incorrect.

Again, I was asking a specific question about why APPLE did not enumerate the specific sections of the DEVELOPER AGREEMENT that Epic violated. Such enumeration is a very common component of a legal demand letter.

I have ZERO interest in anyones else's opinion of which items they believed Epic violated, including yours.
Those quotes ARE from the developer agreement, NOT from the app guidelines. They REFER to the app guidelines (as the Documentation and the Program Requirements).

Your insulting language not withstanding, download the developer agreement yourself and you can confirm that I have copied and pasted straight from it. Additionally, in its answer and counterclaims, Apple cites these same sections.
 
Such enumeration is a very common component of a legal demand letter.
Also, this sentence is false - it's not very common, because the writer doesn't want to be legally estopped or found to have waived anything.

Apple cited the specific sections in its Answer and Counterclaims, which is where it matters.

And the letter Apple sent was not a "legal demand letter" in any case.
 
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