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Apple faces yet another EU antitrust investigation, this time for preferencing iCloud

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Why This Matters

This investigation highlights ongoing regulatory scrutiny of Apple’s business practices within the EU, particularly concerning its dominance in cloud services and interoperability obligations. Such actions could impact how Apple designs its ecosystem, potentially fostering more competition and choice for consumers. The outcome may also set a precedent for global tech companies facing similar antitrust challenges.

Key Takeaways

Apple’s antitrust battles with the European Union are many and varied, and it may now be facing yet another one.

Italy’s competition regulator has today opened an investigation into whether Apple illegally preferences iCloud over third-party cloud services – and says it will be sending a report to the EU Commission …

Apple’s antitrust battles

Apple is facing antitrust actions in a great many countries around the world. In the past couple of years, it has paid fines totaling almost $3 billion for breaches of various competition laws.

The company has generally adopted a tough line in responding to antitrust accusations. It has rarely admitted wrongdoing, and in some cases has said it would rather partially or wholly withdraw from a market than comply with the demands of regulators.

In the case of the Apple Intelligence features in iOS 27, for example, the company has not made these available within the first developer beta inside EU countries. The EU wants Apple to provide third-party AI services with the same access to the iPhone as the new Siri, and the company has refused on security and privacy grounds. The iPhone maker says the European Commission has not even responded to its proposal for a compromise.

Apple accused of illegally preferencing iCloud

Reuters reports that the company is now facing an investigation into whether it illegally preferences iCloud over competing cloud services.

Italy’s competition regulator said ​on Tuesday it had opened an investigation ‌into Apple over compliance with interoperability obligations, under the European Digital Markets Act. Under the ​rules, Apple must ensure that third-party ​providers of consumer cloud services can ⁠inter-operate effectively and free of charge ​with hardware and software components controlled through ​the group’s iOS and iPadOS operating systems, and have equal access as Apple’s iCloud service. The ​authority said in the statement that ​it had proof that other providers of consumer cloud ‌services ⁠could not be in the same position as iCloud, as they did not appear to have access to the ​same components ​used or ⁠made available to Apple’s service.

9to5Mac’s Take

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