EU Prepares to Charge Apple in Antitrust Dispute With Spotify

EU regulators are in the process of finalizing a charge sheet against Apple, initiated by an antitrust complaint from Spotify (via Reuters).

In 2019, Spotify filed a complaint with the European Commission, alleging that Apple enforces App Store rules that “purposely limit choice and stifle innovation at the expense of the user experience,” accusing the company of “acting as both a player and referee to deliberately disadvantage other app developers.”

In particular, Spotify highlighted that Apple’s 30 percent commission on ‌App Store‌ purchases, including in-app subscriptions, forces the music streaming service to charge existing subscribers $12.99 per month for its Premium plan on the ‌App Store‌, just to collect the $9.99 per month it usually charges.

It is proposed that this gives Apple an “unfair advantage,” since Spotify is unable to fairly compete with Apple Music’s standard $9.99 per month price within the ‌‌App Store‌‌. If Spotify chooses not to collect payments via the ‌‌App Store‌‌, Apple purportedly “applies a series of technical and experience-limiting restrictions” on the company. It is also said that Apple was “locking Spotify and other competitors out of Apple services such as Siri, HomePod, and Apple Watch,” thereby making ‌Apple Music‌ a more attractive option for subscribers.

In what appears to be a significant advancement in the antitrust case, Apple looks to be hit with charges by the European Commission, suggesting that the company has likely been found to have conducted itself anti-competitively and violated the EU’s antitrust rules. The EU is now actively preparing a charge sheet against Apple, according to sources speaking to Reuters, which may be sent to the company before the summer.

The Spotify antitrust case is one of several opened by the European Commission into Apple’s business practices last year in June last year, including similar cases from the likes of Kobo-owner Rakuten. It is not yet known what exactly the EU’s charges could involve, but it has been suggested that Apple could be forced to pay a fine or make changes to its ‌App Store‌ business model in Europe to foster greater competition.Tags: Spotify, European Union, European Commission, Europe, antitrust
This article, “EU Prepares to Charge Apple in Antitrust Dispute With Spotify” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

MacRumors-All?d=6W8y8wAjSf4 MacRumors-All?d=qj6IDK7rITs

Related posts

Latest posts

This Android update could stop your phone being stolen

Google wants to make Android phones more secure from thieves and this new update may do exactly that. Google has announced that it is working to offer enhanced factory reset protections on Android phones from later this year. That should mean that a stolen Android phone is so difficult to use, it makes stealing them […]

The Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5080 GPU is $100 off, but there’s a catch

The Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5080 graphics card is on sale from Newegg with a $100 discount for a lowered price of $1,260, but there's a catch.

Cheaper EVs ahead? GM and LG say new battery cells are the key

GM and LG Energy are developing a new battery-cell tech to lower the cost of EVs.

OpenAI makes its most advanced coding model available to paid ChatGPT users

OpenAI's latest AI model, GPT-4.1, is now accessible to ChatGPT Plus, Pro, and Team users, bringing its enhanced coding capabilities and speed to a wider reach.

Waymo recalled 1,200 robotaxis following collisions with road barriers

Waymo’s autonomous-car technology has made great advances over the years to the point where it’s now allowed to offer paid robotaxi rides in select locations in the U.S. But the development of the technology is ongoing, and the robotaxi rides continue to gather valuable data for Waymo engineers to pore over as they further refine […]

Google’s iconic ‘feeling lucky’ button is under threat from you-know-what

Google’s “I’m Feeling Lucky” button has been a familiar part of its homepage since the launch of the search engine 27 years ago, but the company could be about to ditch it. The web giant is currently testing with select users how to integrate its AI chatbot into its homepage. One option is to replace […]

Nothing Phone 3 hype sizzles with a confirmed summer launch

Nothing confirmed the Phone 3 will launch this summer, and teased its price.

Tech Talk: More than you ever wanted to know about malware

You hear a lot of talk about malware finding its way onto your phone. What is it, how do you

Fitbit Labs preps Gemini-fueled lab report summaries, ‘Symptom Checker’ and more

Fitbit Labs explained the three new tests users can soon expect to see in the app.

Max is ditching the rebrand and going back to HBO Max

Max is officially hitting the undo button on that name change.