- Barry Diller said
Apple overcharges "in a disgusting manner" on itsApp Store . - Spiegel said Snap is "happy" to pay the 30% fee and said the firm wouldn't exist without Apple.
- The comments come as Apple defends itself in a trial that focuses on if its App Store is a monopoly.
Business figures are split on Apple as CEO Tim Cook testifies in an antitrust trial focused on the App Store.
In separate interviews with CNBC on Friday, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel and Expedia Chairman Barry Diller came out swinging for and against, respectively, Apple as Cook took the stand.
Diller criticized Apple for using its "quasi-monopoly" to overcharge companies like his in "a disgusting manner" through its App Store commissions. The company requires developers to pay a 30% fee on purchases made in the marketplace, and many have long seen the practice as a way for Apple to obtain an unfair advantage in the market.
"The idea that they actually justify it by saying, 'We spend all this money protecting our little App Store,'" Diller told CNBC. "I mean, it's criminal. Well, it will be criminal."
Spiegel later spoke with the outlet and said Snap is "happy" to pay the 30% commission fee on in-app purchases.
"We really feel like
Snap and
Read more: The App Store is Apple's most valuable asset, but also its biggest liability
Cook's Friday appearance on the stand comes as part of a trial that began earlier this month in California, prompted by a conflict between Apple and "Fortnite" creator Epic Games last summer.
Apple pulled the wildly popular "Fortnite" from its App Store in 2020 after Epic skirted the company's rules and fees to add its own in-app payment system. Epic has argued that Apple's App Store is a monopoly, while Apple says Epic simply broke the rules that govern its developers.
The trial is expected to conclude on Monday, and its results could majorly impact Apple's business.