According to Financial TimesThe European Commission plans to charge Apple with violating the Digital Markets Act after the iPhone maker broke its pledge to allow app developers to “redirect” users to offers outside the App Store for free. We are talking about three people who know the subject.
The EU appears to have reservations about paying for Apple’s core technology, but the exact charges it allegedly plans to bring against Apple are unknown. According to the report, Apple could face fines of up to 5% of its average daily global revenue, currently just over $1 billion, for non-compliance.
The report says the EU’s findings are preliminary, so Apple may still have time to make the necessary changes to iOS before regulators formally file criminal charges. The report stated that if the EU makes accusations, the European Commission will officially announce them “in the coming weeks”.
Earlier this year, Apple made significant changes to the App Store, Apple Pay, Safari and more on iPhones in the EU as part of iOS 17.4. Apple now allows alternative app marketplaces but still charges for the underlying technology. Apple also introduced a default web browser selection screen in Safari; It now allows third-party web browsers to use web engines other than its own WebKit engine on the iPhone, and it now allows third-party mobile wallet apps to access the iPhone’s NFC chip for contactless access. payment function.