苹果被发现违反欧盟竞争规则
Apple found in breach of EU competition rules

原始链接: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/article/2024/jun/24/apple-breach-eu-competition-rules-digital-markets-act

苹果面临欧盟的指控,称其违反了旨在促进科技公司之间竞争并为应用市场消费者提供负担得起的替代品的新法规。 欧盟委员会的初步调查结果表明,苹果的应用商店指南不符合《数字市场法》(DMA)。 如果未能在一年内进行调整,该公司可能面临高达全球收入 10% 的处罚。 此外,还针对第三方应用程序开发商涉嫌不合规的合同条款启动了新的调查。 这些行动标志着该委员会对苹果、谷歌和 Meta 的第三次和第六次全面调查。 关键问题包括: 1. 收费:欧盟认为,虽然向开发商收取促进销售的费用是合理的,但苹果的收费超出了必要的范围。 2.引导客户:开发者必须提供无成本的方法来将用户引导至外部交易,据报道苹果不允许这样做。 3. 透明度:客户很难在不离开应用生态系统的情况下获取清晰的定价数据,这违反了 DMA 要求。 在等待最终确认时,这些初步调查结果代表了一个临时步骤,类似于正式反垄断程序的中点,即公司收到反对声明和修改任何反竞争行为的指定期限。 尽管如此,苹果坚称它仍然遵守相关法规。

苹果在科技行业拥有举足轻重的影响力,控制着几乎全部的编辑权,并对 iPhone 销售的所有软件收取高额费用。 尽管有网络、Android、Windows、Linux、游戏机和智能电视等替代方案,但苹果的主导地位仍然存在,因为其庞大的用户群主要由 iPhone 用户组成,而他们可能不知道苹果的做法。 批评者认为,由于其巨大的市场影响力,苹果的影响力超出了典型的行业标准,引发了监管的呼声。 然而,反对者认为,苹果提供了独特的功能和竞争优势,并坚称其费用和控制权在更广泛的科技领域背景下是可以接受的。 随着监管机构考虑采取干预措施来解决有关市场主导地位和消费者选择的担忧,争论仍在继续。
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原文

Apple has been found to be in breach of sweeping new EU laws designed to allow smaller companies to compete and allow consumers to find cheaper and alternative apps in the tech business’s app store.

The European Commission, which also acts as the EU antitrust and technology regulator, said it had sent its preliminary findings to Apple after an investigation launched in March.

“For too long Apple has been squeezing out innovative companies — denying consumers new opportunities and choices,” said Thierry Breton, the European commissioner responsible for digital markets, on X.

In preliminary findings, against which Apple can appeal, the European Commission said it believed its rules of engagement did not comply with the Digital Markets Act (DMA) “as they prevent app developers from freely steering consumers to alternatives channels for offers and content”.

The company has 12 months to comply before it face fines of up to 10% of its global revenues but the EU hopes ongoing dialogue will lead to compliance rather than sanctions.

In addition, the commission has opened a new non-compliance procedure against Apple over concerns its new contract terms for third-party app developers also fall short of the DMA’s requirements.

It is the third non-compliance investigation opened by the commission into Apple since the DMA came into force last year and the sixth launched in total, with two other inquiries outstanding into Google and one into Meta, the owner of Facebook.

At the heart of Monday’s findings are three elements of Apple’s practices, including fees charged to app developers for every purchase made within seven days of linking out to the commercial app.

The commission says a fee for such matchmaking is justifiable but what Apple charges goes “beyond what is strictly necessary”.

In its preliminary findings on its earlier investigation, the EU has reiterated that the new digital laws require Apple to ensure that developers should be able “free of charge to inform their customers of alternative cheaper purchasing possibilities, steer them to those offers and allow them to make purchases”.

As part of the new investigation, the commission is examining 0.50c charge, or “core technology fee”, Apple demands every time a developer’s app is installed on a phone.

The allegations that Apple is breaking EU law are the first against a tech company under the DMA, landmark legislation introduced last August to ensure six designated “very large online platforms” including Google, Amazon, Meta and ByteDance (TikTok) compete fairly.

The commission also found that Apple made it difficult for customers to find the pricing information, requiring them to “link out” to a webpage where a customer could then find the contract details.

“If the commission’s preliminary views were to be ultimately confirmed, none of Apple’s three sets of business terms would comply with article 5(4) of the DMA, which requires gatekeepers to allow app developers to steer consumers to offers outside the gatekeepers’ app stores, free of charge,” the Commission said.

The EU likened Monday’s preliminary findings to the halfway stage in a formal anti-trust investigation during which a company is shown a statement of objection and given time to rectify its anti-competitive practices.

Apple said it had made a number of changes to comply with the DMA in the past few months in response to feedback from developers and the European Commission investigators.

“We are confident our plan complies with the law, and estimate more than 99% of developers would pay the same or less in fees to Apple under the new business terms we created,” it said.

“All developers doing business in the EU on the App Store have the opportunity to utilise the capabilities that we have introduced, including the ability to direct app users to the web to complete purchases at a very competitive rate. As we have done routinely, we will continue to listen and engage with the European Commission.”

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