
As evidence, Bornstein said Apple feels no pressure to lower its prices, that there's a lack of innovation in the store, and that in the event of a price increase, it's unlikely developers would leave the iOS platform.

Epic wants the market to be defined as the iOS app distribution market, over which it has argued Apple has an illegal monopoly that results in higher prices and reduced competition.
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The first topic was how to define the market, which in turn will determine the scope of the judge's ruling.

Monday's courtroom exchanges went even further in distilling the three-week trial down to its essence, helping minimize many of the hard-to-follow tangents and bringing into focus the core arguments we've heard over close to 100 hours of testimony. It was the first time we heard anyone from Apple speak so plainly about how it views the App Store as a product, the company's relationship with its developers, and why it feels justified in keeping companies like Epic from launching competing stores of their own.

