Musi, a free music-streaming app that had tens of millions of iPhone downloads and garnered plenty of controversy over its ...
A lawsuit brought against Apple by music streaming app Musi has been dismissed by a federal judge, after she ruled that Apple's developer agreement gives it the right to remove any app from the App ...
A federal judge dismissed Musi's lawsuit, ruling Apple can remove App Store apps anytime, setting a major precedent for developers and platform control ...
Apple has won its legal battle with music app Musi, which sources its music from YouTube rather than having deals with record labels. A judge ruled that Apple was within its rights to axe Musi from ...
Aa federal judge dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice in what might become a landmark case related to App Store delistings.
A lawsuit from music streaming app Musi suggested Apple had removed its app over unsubstantiated copyright claims, but it has been dismissed by courts with prejudice.
A lawsuit against Apple from the Musi music streaming app Musi has been dismissed, reports AppleInsider. A federal judge dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice, confirming Apple’s right to remove the ...
Think your favorite apps are safe? A new court ruling in the Musi case confirms Apple can pull the plug on any app at any time, for any reason.
The court also ordered Musi’s counsel, Winston & Strawn LLP, to pay Apple’s attorneys’ fees tied to the sanctions litigation.
When Apple delisted free music streaming app Musi from the App Store in 2024, it resulted in the app's developers suing Apple over the removal.
Musi, a free music-streaming app only available on iPhone, sued Apple last week, arguing that Apple breached Musi’s developer agreement by abruptly removing the app from its App Store for no good ...
Music streaming app Musi has sued Apple on breach-of-contract claims. The platform allows users to stream YouTube's entire music catalogue for free. YouTube contends that Musi is infringing on its ...