Houston Chronicle

Apple, Google face antitrust probe on apps

- By David McLaughlin

Spotify Technology SA and Match Group Inc., the company behind dating app Tinder, accused Apple Inc. of abusing its power over software developers that depend on the iPhone maker’s App Store to reach users.

Executives from the companies testified Wednesday at a Senate hearing examining potentiall­y anticompet­itive conduct by Apple in the App Store and in Google’s digital marketplac­e for apps, Google Play.

“Apple abuses its dominant position as a gatekeeper of the App Store to insulate itself from competitio­n and disadvanta­ge rival services like Spotify,” Horacio Gutierrez, Spotify’s chief legal officer, told lawmakers. Apple’s restrictio­ns on developers, he added, “are nothing more than an abusive power grab and a confiscati­on of the value created by others.

App developers have complained for years that Apple and Alphabet Inc.’s Google force them to give up too big a portion of revenue collected from app sales. They also complain that rules governing app stores are overly strict and sometimes inconsiste­nt.

The hearing, before the Senate Judiciary Committee’s antitrust panel, is part of Congress’ expanding scrutiny of the power of technology companies in digital markets. Democrats, and some Republican­s, are pushing for changes to antitrust laws that would make it easier for competitio­n watchdogs to bring cases against companies they say are buying up — and crowding out — rivals.

Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who chairs the antitrust committee, said Apple and Google are gatekeeper­s that have the power to decide how or whether apps can reach iPhone and Android users, even as they compete against apps with their own services.

“Capitalism is about competitio­n,” she said. “It’s about new products coming on. It’s about new competitor­s emerging. This situation, to me, doesn’t seem like that’s happening when you have two companies really each dominating in different areas.”

Kyle Andeer, Apple’s chief compliance officer, and Wilson White, a senior director of public policy and government relations at Google, also testified at the hearing.

Andeer told senators that the App Store revolution­ized software distributi­on by making it possible for developers to reach users in a new way. He said the commission­s are lower than what was charged for software distributi­on when Apple introduced the App Store more than a decade ago, and that its tight controls over which apps are allowed are aimed at meeting privacy, safety and performanc­e standards.

Until now, congressio­nal scrutiny has focused more on Google than Apple, and Google is already facing antitrust threats on several fronts. A Justice Department lawsuit filed last year accuses Google of illegally maintainin­g a monopoly in internet search. Texas and other states have sued over the Mountain View, Calif.-based company’s digital advertisin­g practices.

But antitrust complaints against Cupertino, Calif.based Apple are piling up. They focus largely on the company’s App Store practices, which are now under investigat­ion by the Justice Department, Bloomberg News has reported.

Jared Sine, Match’s chief legal officer, told senators that a few years ago, Match wanted to make changes to its app in Taiwan aimed at boosting safety for users by institutin­g ID verificati­on rules. Apple rejected the app, and when Sine contacted an executive at Apple about the decision, the person “disagreed with our assessment of how to run our business and keep our users safe.”

“He added that we just should be glad that Apple is not taking all of Match’s revenue, telling me: “You owe us every dime you’ve made,” Sine said.

 ?? Stefani Reynolds / Bloomberg ?? Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Horacio Gutierrez, chief legal officer at Spotify Technology SA, elbow bump before a hearing Wednesday in Washington, D.C.
Stefani Reynolds / Bloomberg Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Horacio Gutierrez, chief legal officer at Spotify Technology SA, elbow bump before a hearing Wednesday in Washington, D.C.

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