Music News

Epic Win: Google Loses Appeal in Landmark Antitrust Case as Play Store Shake-Up Looms

Epic Win: Google Loses Appeal in Landmark Antitrust Case as Play Store Shake-Up Looms

Epic Win: Google Loses Appeal in Landmark Antitrust Case as Play Store Shake-Up Looms

OohYeah

By: OohYeah

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Jul 31, 2025

Photo by:

July 31, 2025 — In a pivotal development in the long-running legal battle between Epic Games and Google, a federal appeals court has rejected Google's attempt to overturn a major antitrust verdict—marking another milestone victory for Epic and potentially reshaping the future of Android's app ecosystem.

While Apple largely emerged victorious from a similar lawsuit brought by Epic Games back in 2020, Google’s fate has taken a different turn. This week, an appeals court upheld a 2023 jury ruling that found Google guilty of anticompetitive conduct related to its Play Store operations—confirming that Google maintained an illegal monopoly over app distribution and payments on Android devices.

“Total victory,” Epic CEO Tim Sweeney posted on social media following the decision. Sweeney has long argued that mobile gatekeepers should not dictate how apps are distributed—or skim profits from transactions that should go directly to developers and creators.

A Case Years in the Making

Epic Games first filed lawsuits against both Apple and Google in August 2020, after Fortnite was removed from app stores for bypassing in-app payment systems. The legal fight with Apple ended in disappointment for Epic, but in California courts, Epic scored a historic win against Google.

In December 2023, a jury unanimously ruled that Google had violated U.S. antitrust laws, citing exclusive agreements, financial kickbacks, and restrictive Play Store rules designed to suppress competition. Google’s dominance allowed it to extract up to 30% in fees from developers—fees that drained independent platforms and limited consumer choice.

The court issued a permanent injunction in 2024 requiring Google to:

  • Allow third-party billing systems inside apps;

  • Permit links to external payment options;

  • Prohibit retaliation against developers who bypass Google’s billing system.

This ruling, if enforced, could reshape how apps handle transactions—shifting power from Big Tech back to creators and consumers.

Why It Matters for Artists and OohYeah

For music platforms like OohYeah, the stakes couldn’t be higher. OohYeah was built as a commission‑free ecosystem where artists sell music, merch, and services directly to fans. But under Google’s Play Store monopoly, even commission-free models are forced into Google’s billing system—meaning a chunk of every artist‑to‑fan transaction risks being siphoned off by a middleman.

The injunction against Google opens the door for platforms like OohYeah to fully honor their promise: direct sales from fans go entirely to the artist, with no hidden cuts.

In practice, this means a fan buying an album download, tipping a musician, or subscribing to an artist’s exclusive content could do so without Google demanding a slice. That’s the difference between an artist making a living—or watching profits disappear into corporate overhead.

What the Ruling Means

Friday’s decision keeps the injunction alive, though enforcement is temporarily paused under an emergency stay. Still, the writing is on the wall: Google’s grip on app payments is cracking.

Epic has already announced plans to launch the Epic Games Store for Android—something impossible under Google’s old rules. Similarly, platforms like OohYeah could soon be freer to expand how they process payments, ensuring that artist earnings flow directly to creators rather than corporate toll booths.

What’s Next?

Google is expected to fight on, with possible appeals all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. For now, the Play Store’s restrictions remain in effect until the stay is lifted.

“We disagree with the court’s decision and will continue to defend our platform,” a Google spokesperson said following the ruling.

But for developers, musicians, and digital rights advocates, the ruling is already being hailed as a turning point in the fight against Big Tech monopolies.

A Turning Point for Mobile Markets

The Epic v. Google case is more than a courtroom drama—it’s a battle over who gets paid in the digital economy. If enforcement goes through, Android users could soon install rival app stores, and developers could finally integrate fair, transparent payment systems.

For independent musicians, this could mean the end of mandatory corporate tolls on fan support. And for platforms like OohYeah, it means a chance to deliver on its vision: a music-first ecosystem where artists keep 100%, fans pay artists directly, and middlemen are cut out for good.

This story will be updated as the case develops and enforcement unfolds.

Share this article

Share this article

Share this article

Related Articles

Related Articles

Related Articles