Shanghai Daily

EU fines Apple in music streaming row

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THE European Union on Monday hit Apple with a 1.8-billion euro (US$1.9 billion) fine for violating the bloc’s laws by preventing music streaming services from informing users about subscripti­on options outside of its App Store.

The iPhone maker immediatel­y vowed to appeal the first-ever antitrust fine slapped on Apple by Brussels, the culminatio­n of a case triggered by a complaint by Swedish music streaming giant Spotify.

The European Commission said it “found that Apple applied restrictio­ns on app developers preventing them from informing iOS users about alternativ­e and cheaper music subscripti­on services available outside of the app.”

“This is illegal under EU antitrust rules,” the EU’s powerful antitrust regulator said.

“Apple’s conduct, which lasted for almost ten years, may have led many iOS users to pay significan­tly higher prices for music streaming subscripti­ons because of the high commission fee imposed by Apple on developers and passed on to consumers.”

Spotify’s complaint in 2019 triggered a broad commission investigat­ion into the iPhone maker in 2021, but Brussels narrowed its probe last year to focus on Apple’s actions to prevent apps from giving users informatio­n about rival music subscripti­on options.

“For a decade, Apple abused its dominant position in the market for the distributi­on of music streaming apps through the App Store,” commission vice president Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.

“We have ordered Apple to remove the necessary provisions and to refrain from similar practices in the future,” Vestager told reporters.

Apple slammed the commission’s decision and said it would appeal.

“The decision was reached despite the Commission’s failure to uncover any credible evidence of consumer harm, and ignores the realities of a market that is thriving, competitiv­e, and growing fast,” Apple said in a statement.

“While we respect the European Commission, the facts simply don’t support this decision. And as a result, Apple will appeal,” it added.

Despite the scale of the penalty, critics point out that even fines above hundreds of millions of euros pale in comparison to how much Apple makes. In the last three months of 2023, Apple reported US$33.92 billion in profits.

Brussels has already hit Google with penalties of around 8 billion euros in the past few years, although the United States-based firm is challengin­g the fines in EU courts.

But the EU expects the fine will lead Apple to stop limiting access to rival streaming services — all the more since it will also be obliged to do so under a new law known as the Digital Markets Act that it must adhere to by March 7.

Google owner Alphabet, Amazon, TikTok’s parent ByteDance, Meta and Microsoft must also comply.

The DMA gives the commission the power to fine firms up to 10 percent of global revenue for any violations or 20 percent for repeat offenders.

Apple rejects Spotify claims and points to the streaming giant’s market dominance in online music.

Spotify has more than 600 million monthly users, a third of them are paying subscriber­s, according to its latest figures published last month.

Apple Music, a music streaming service, represents 8 percent of the European market, the company says, compared with Spotify’s more than 50 percent share.

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