Elon Musk backed by Fortnite maker in battle against 'menace to freedom' Apple - live updates

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Elon Musk launched a tirade against Apple - REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
Elon Musk launched a tirade against Apple - REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

The maker of the Fortnite series of games has leapt to the defence of Elon Musk after the Twitter owner accused Apple of threatening to pull the social network from its App Store.

Mr Musk attacked the iPhone maker with a flurry of tweets on Monday, saying the company had cut its Twitter advertising and threatened to bump the social network from Apple's App Store.

The SpaceX chief executive  asked whether Apple hated free speech, criticised its app fees and even pondered whether the tech giant might go after another of his companies, Tesla.

Mr Musk, 51, also posted a meme suggesting he planned to "go to war" rather than pay the 30pc fee.

Tim Sweeney, the chief executive of Epic Games, which makes the hugely successful Fortnite series, gave his support, calling Apple "a menace to freedom worldwide".

In 2019, Epic sued Apple for anticompetitive behavior with its App Store, but a judge ruled largely in favour of the world’s most valuable company last year.

Both Epic and Apple are appealing the case after the judge also said Apple should allow developers to link customers to their own payment systems.

Mr Sweeney said: "Epic attempted to open discussions for five years, from 2015 to 2020. Apple would never talk. This is chronicled in the public record of the Epic v Apple antitrust trial.

"Apple is a menace to freedom worldwide. They maintain an illegal monopoly on app distribution, they use it to control American discourse, and they're endangering protesters in China by storing sensitive customer data in a state-owned data center [sic]."

Read the latest updates below.


09:33 AM

Goldman Sachs 'to move London traders to Milan'

Goldman Sachs - REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Goldman Sachs - REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

Goldman Sachs is shifting some of its traders from London to Milan amid the European Central Bank's (ECB) push for the world's biggest banks to relocate staff to within the EU.

The Wall Street giant will likely move staff early next year, with Goldman also hiring staff locally, according to Bloomberg.

A spokesman for the bank declined to give details on the number of people moving. The bank has 80 people currently employed in Milan.

Banks are under pressure to move traders from London to EU cities like Paris, Frankfurt and Amsterdam.

The ECB said in May that lenders in the euro area are still too dependent on operations outside the bloc.

It said a fifth of trading desks it reviewed "warranted targeted supervisory action".


09:21 AM

Social media giants face multi-million pound fines if they fail to ban child accounts

Social media firms will be forced to bar underaged children or face multi-million pound fines under a new law to protect them from harm online.