Apple starts legal action against Russian regulator in App Store dispute
Apple has started legal proceedings against Russia’s
anti-monopoly regulator in a dispute concerning alternative payment options on
its App Store platform, the RIA news agency reported on Sunday citing court
filings.
Russia opened an antitrust case against Apple in late
October, accusing it of failing to allow app developers to tell customers about
alternative payment options when using its App Store. It said Apple could face
a fine based on its revenue in Russia if found guilty.
In documents published on Dec. 1, the Moscow Arbitration
Court listed Apple as a claimant and Russia’s Federal Anti-monopoly Service
(FAS) as a defendant in “economic disputes over administrative legal
relations.”
Apple, which did not immediately respond to a Reuters
request for comment, demanded that additional documents be added to the case on
Dec. 2, RIA reported.
Forbes Russia cited a FAS representative as saying that the
proceedings related to a warning it issued on Aug. 30 over Apple’s alleged
failure to inform users they could also pay for purchases outside the App
Store.
The FAS did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Apple faced pushback over its App Store rules in the United
States in September when a federal judge issued a ruling forcing the company to
allow developers to send their users to other payment systems.
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