Government & Policy

Apple says it ‘expects to make’ App Store policy changes due to EU DMA

Comment

iPhone 15 Pro on stands at the Apple Event 2023
Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

Apple has bowed to the inevitable and said it “expects to make” App Store policy changes to comply with EU’s Digital Markets Act (DMA).

The pan-EU DMA came into application across the bloc back in May. Apple has likely been expecting for months, if not years, to be subject to the new ex ante competition regime — which was first proposed by the Commission at the end of 2020. But the language change in its filing makes it explicit policy shifts are on the way.

The iPhone-maker has updated the language pertaining to its risk factors in the fiscal year 2023 Form 10-K filing (PDF), with the revised text presenting a shift from the company’s previous position, indicating a more definitive stance on potential modifications to the App Store policies.

Apple said that future changes could also affect how the company charges developers for access to its platforms; how it manages distribution of apps outside of the App Store; and “how, and to what extent, it allows developers to communicate with consumers inside the App Store regarding alternative purchasing mechanisms.”

The DMA is EU lawmakers’ response to Big Tech, as a category — as classic competition law enforcement has repeatedly been shown to be too slow and retroactive to prevent dominant tech giants using exploitative tactics to entrench and expand their market power.

A classic case is the EU’s 2018 antitrust enforcement against Google Android. A record-breaking $5 billion penalty levied on the tech giant, after the Commission found Google had breached competition rules, has still failed to move the needle on market share for alternatives to Google’s mobile OS, search engine or browser.

The DMA aims to switch competition enforcement on tech giants to the front foot by putting a series of obligations on designated gatekeepers from the get-go. These include requirements not to prevent business users from promoting their own offers to end users, and a ban on preventing the installation of third-party app stores, to name two which look very relevant to Apple’s App Store.

Earlier this year, in July, Apple informed the Commission it expected to fall under the DMA. That was then officially confirmed in September — when the Commission named six tech giants who were being designed as so-called gatekeepers, with Apple among them.

In a report to clients late Tuesday, Morgan Stanley analysts wrote that they believe Apple’s change of language confirms the fact that App Store changes are coming and that Apple will “likely begin 3rd party app stores on device in Europe.”

It added: “We believe Apple is well positioned to compete should these changes take place due to the App Store’s security, centralization, and convenience, limiting the potential user experience and/or P&L impact.”

We’ve already had a glimpse of the impact of the incoming policy changes on Apple’s App Store via an antitrust intervention in the Netherlands last year. The local competition authority forced Apple to let local dating apps use alternative payment technologies, rather than Apple’s own, to take in-app payments from their users following complaints by developers.

The Dutch authority was acting with an eye on the incoming DMA. But where its intervention could only lead to App Store policy shifts that just got applied in the Netherlands, and only for dating apps, the DMA’s impact will be felt across the EU and is not limited to certain types of users. So the impact will be greater.

The deadline for gatekeepers’ compliance with the pan-EU DMA is March 7, 2024. Penalties for infringements can reach up to 10% of global annual turnover — or even more for repeat offences.

This report was updated with a correction: The EU designated six gatekeepers in September, rather than seven as we originally reported. We regret the error

More TechCrunch

A YouTube creator is seeking to bring a class action lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that the company trained its generative AI models on millions of transcripts from YouTube videos without…

YouTuber files class action suit over OpenAI’s scrape of creators’ transcripts

India’s fast-growing quick commerce market is getting a new deep-pocketed entrant: Walmart-owned Flipkart, India’s largest e-commerce firm. Flipkart has started to roll out Flipkart Minutes, its quick commerce service, in…

Flipkart blitzes into India’s 10-minute quick commerce battle

The list includes Elon Musk’s xAI, which is already valued at a staggering $24 billion, as well as a good number of other AI startups.

38 startups have become unicorns so far in 2024: Here’s the full list

When a company is the size of Amazon, a lot of bad actors will come after it and its customers, which makes defending the network a monster job. Over the…

AWS unveils Mithra to identify and mitigate malicious domains across its massive system

The European Commission has closed a Digital Services Act (DSA) investigation of a rewards feature in TikTok Lite by accepting commitments from the social media giant to permanently withdraw the…

TikTok Lite: EU closes addictive design case after TikTok commits to not bring back rewards mechanism

Groq, a startup developing chips to run generative AI models faster than conventional processors, said on Monday that it has raised $640 million in a new funding round led by…

AI chip startup Groq lands $640M to challenge Nvidia

COVID-19 pushed people to take up outdoor activities. Now, startups are helping companies and consumers keep up with demand.

From golf to hunting, a new crop of startups want to make these experiences even better

Despite increasing demand for AI safety and accountability, today’s tests and benchmarks may fall short, according to a new report. Generative AI models — models that can analyze and output…

Many safety evaluations for AI models have significant limitations

OpenAI has built a tool that could potentially catch students who cheat by asking ChatGPT to write their assignments — but according to The Wall Street Journal, the company is…

OpenAI says it’s taking a ‘deliberate approach’ to releasing tools that can detect writing from ChatGPT

Chief Product Officer Craig Saldanha says AI is already transforming the Yelp experience.

Yelp’s chief product officer talks AI and authenticity

Featured Article

Even after $1.6B in VC money, the lab-grown meat industry is facing ‘massive’ issues

Any goal that puts cultivated meat in big box grocery stores or on fast food menus in the 2020s is “unrealistic,” according to experts.

Even after $1.6B in VC money, the lab-grown meat industry is facing ‘massive’ issues

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway cut its Apple holding by around half, to $84.2 billion, according to an SEC filing. While Apple remains the firm’s largest stock holding by far, Buffett…

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sells half its Apple stock

A fireside chat between Jensen Huang and Mark Zuckerberg at SIGGRAPH 2024 took some unexpected turns. What started as a conversation about the capabilities of Nvidia GPUs and Zuckerberg’s vision…

Zuckerberg and Jensen show off their friendship, while an AI necklace covets yours

We spoke to Harness CEO and founder Jyoti Bansal about his previous company, which Cisco bought for $3.7 billion in 2017.

When a big company comes after a hot startup, it’s not a slam dunk decision to sell

Dojo is Tesla’s custom-built supercomputer that’s designed to train its “Full Self-Driving” neural networks.

Tesla Dojo: Elon Musk’s big plan to build an AI supercomputer, explained

Featured Article

Trade My Spin is building a business around used Peloton equipment

Trade My Spin has pieced together a logistics network capable of offering same or next day delivery in most major cities in the continental U.S.

Trade My Spin is building a business around used Peloton equipment

Featured Article

Meet the founder who built and sold a $600M enterprise software startup from Sri Lanka

Sanjiva Weerawarana co-founded WSO2 in 2005, recently selling it for more than $600M. He sometimes drives for Uber, too.

Meet the founder who built and sold a $600M enterprise software startup from Sri Lanka

Investors are assisting startup founders earlier than ever in an effort to help them bridge the first climate tech valley of death.

Why Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy and other investors are scouring universities for founders

While both the DSA and DMA aim to achieve distinct things, they are best understood as a joint response to Big Tech’s market power.

DSA vs. DMA: How Europe’s twin digital regulations are hitting Big Tech

Featured Article

How the theft of 40M UK voter register records was entirely preventable

A scathing rebuke by the U.K. data protection watchdog reveals what led to the compromise of tens of millions of U.K. voters’ information.

How the theft of 40M UK voter register records was entirely preventable

Self-driving technology company Aurora Innovation was hoping to raise hundreds of millions in additional capital as it races toward a driverless commercial launch by the end of 2024. The company, which…

Self-driving truck startup Aurora Innovation raises $483M in share sale ahead of commercial launch

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department are suing TikTok and ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, with violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). The law requires digital…

FTC and Justice Department sue TikTok over alleged child privacy violations

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups.  This week we are looking at acquisitions of small startups, two new…

Acquiring AI talent wholesale

In a big move, Character.AI co-founder and CEO Noam Shazeer is returning to Google after leaving the company in October 2021 to found the a16z-backed chatbot startup. In his previous…

Character.AI CEO Noam Shazeer returns to Google

The startup developed a two-material system that helps homes self-regulate their internal humidity.

Adept Materials’ dehumidifying paint was inspired by trees and semiconductors

When the developers replied to the July 19 email, Yelp sent a deck of pricing tiers with base pricing starting from $229 per month for a limit of 1,000 API…

Yelp’s lack of transparency around API charges angers developers

Featured Article

Cloud infrastructure revenue approached $80 billion this quarter

The cloud infrastructure market has put the doldrums of 2023 firmly behind it with another big quarter. Revenue continues to grow at a brisk pace, fueled by interest in AI. Synergy Research reports revenue totaled $79 billion for the quarter, up $14.1 billion or 22% from last year. This marked…

Cloud infrastructure revenue approached $80 billion this quarter

The pharma giant won’t say how many patients were affected by its February data breach. A count by TechCrunch confirms that over a million people are affected.

Pharma giant Cencora is alerting millions about its data breach

Payments infrastructure firm Infibeam Avenues has acquired a majority 54% stake in Rediff.com for up to $3 million, a dramatic twist of fate for the 28-year-old business that was the…

Rediff, once an internet pioneer in India, sells majority stake for $3M

The ruling confirmed an earlier decision in April from the High Court of Podgorica which rejected a request to extradite the crypto fugitive to the United States.

Terraform Labs co-founder and crypto fugitive Do Kwon set for extradition to South Korea