UK Regulators to Investigate Apple Following Loss of Appeal

UK Regulators to Investigate Apple Following Loss of Appeal

A UK investigation into Apple’s and Google’s ‌dominance of the markets for mobile browsers and‌ cloud gaming will go⁣ ahead​ as a ⁣local antitrust regulator has won an ⁤appeal against a previous ruling that had blocked its work.

The story so far…

The UK Competition‍ and Markets Authority began investigating both companies last year. Part of⁢ that probe looked at how Apple might be restricting the cloud gaming ⁢market by restricting such spaces on its App Store.

The regulator ⁢at the time said, “Apple’s restrictions in particular ​are holding⁢ back ⁢potentially disruptive innovation that could transform the way that consumers access and experience​ content online.”

Things ‍moved relatively fast, but Apple‍ appealed the decision to launch the investigation on the basis that ⁣the CMA ‌inquiry began too late. The​ Competition Appeal Tribunal subsequently upheld Apple’s argument in March. The‌ CMA then appealed that judgment and succeeded‌ when the UK Court of⁣ Appeal ​overturned that ‌decision ‍today.

You can read the‌ latest judgment in full here.

Regulators will now go ahead and investigate

This‍ effectively means the investigation will take place.⁢ If the‍ agency finds against Apple, it ‌could impose remedies that include insisting browsers be able ⁤to use rendering engines other than WebKit or mandating inclusion ⁣of cloud games services within the App Store.

The three‍ main strands of the investigation relate to:

How control of the browser market affects developers. 
The insistence that ​browser ​developers use‌ WebKit.
Apple’s refusal ​to permit cloud ‌gaming services/portals on the App store.

The CMA has the power to require Apple to make certain ⁢changes. It could,⁤ for example, insist⁣ browsers on ⁢Apple’s devices be able to⁤ use different rendering engines, or require Apple to include cloud ⁣games services on the App Store, or other remedies.

Does Apple now have plans‌ in place to mitigate?

While Apple⁢ continues to put up a ‍solid defense to​ protect its existing ⁢business practices,⁢ it also seems possible the company has used the⁣ time⁤ it ‍bought constructively to blunt the impact of any declared ​remedies.

Last December, we heard reports ​the company‌ had ​assembled an internal team to focus on how to ​meet‍ regulatory​ demands. That team might‍ be working ⁣on introducing support‍ for non-WebKit browsers ‍and ‌third-party payment systems.

Many of⁣ the changes Apple does decide to put in place should be implemented ‍by⁣ the time EU regulations requiring⁤ they‌ be⁢ made go into effect in March 2024.

One of the‍ bigger‌ changes the team seems to have been working on may​ be the introduction of support for sideloading of applications, which we think the company now has some basic infrastructure to support. That change had ​originally⁢ been half-expected to ⁣see the light at⁢ WWDC, though likely confined to the EU, and (now) potentially the UK.

What’s really at‌ stake?

It’s likely⁣ Apple hopes⁤ that if ​it handles the process of bringing itself ⁢in ⁤line with the increasingly…

2023-12-08 01:41:02
Original from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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