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Apple files appeal against court ruling that mandated App Store changes TechTricks365


Apple is appealing against the court ruling that has mandated App Store changes

While complying with the courts and their mandated changes to the App Store as fallout from the Epic vs. Apple suit, Apple has now also filed its appeal against the ruling.

On May 1, 2025, US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ordered Apple to immediately make specific changes to its App Store practices, after ruling that it had failed to comply with its previous obligations. The judge specifically refused any delay, but did allow for Apple to appeal — and it has now done so.

As first spotted by The Verge, Apple has filed its notice of appeal to the United States District Court for the district of Northern California. The filing is a short document only listing which case is being appealed against — US District Court case 4:20-cv-05640-YGR — and the names of Apple’s legal counsel.

As yet, there is no schedule for the appeal, nor has there been any public response from the court regarding the filing. It’s just the first required step in lodging the appeal that Apple had already confirmed it would do when it said “we strongly disagree” with the ruling.

Since the ruling required immediate compliance, Apple has had to implement all of the judge’s orders, but will of course be hoping to reverse at least some of them. The appeal is also specifically against the ruling regarding alleged anti-competitive practices with the App Store, and has no connection with the potential criminal contempt proceedings that Judge Gonzalez Rogers is pursuing.

As part of complying with the order, Apple has had to drop its limitations on developers promoting alternatives to the App Store’s in-app payment system. As a consequence, companies that had been lobbying for this change, such as Spotify, immediately updated their apps to give users the option of direct payments.

The ruling follows the years-long Epic Games versus Apple trial, which Apple won on every count bar one. That count regarded Apple’s anti-steering practices that limited developers, and Apple claimed to have subsequently complied with the court’s 2021 ruling on the issue.

However, Epic Games claimed that Apple’s compliance instead “frustrate and effectively nullify the relief the Court ordered.”

In her ruling mandating changes, Judge Gonzalez Rogers, agreed that Apple had created “new anticompetitive barriers. She said that Apple “thought this court would tolerate such insubordination was a gross miscalculation.”

Apple has not commented publicly on its appeal filing.


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