The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Apple adds nuance to app store terms

Some content providers get way around commission­s

- NIVEDITA BALU STEPHEN NELLIS

Apple Inc. on Wednesday made a new concession on how App Store developers work with customers: It will allow subscripti­on and content apps that it calls "reader" apps, a category that potentiall­y includes Netflix, Disney+ and Amazon's Kindle, to provide users with a direct link to their website for signups, avoiding an Apple commission.

The move follows some concession­s to developers last week and comes as the iphone maker contends with legal and regulatory challenges to rules it forces app makers to follow, including a closely watched antitrust lawsuit brought by Fortnite creator Epic Games.

WHAT ARE ‘READER’ APPS?

Apple says "reader" apps provide previously purchased content or subscripti­ons for app-based magazines, newspapers, books, music and video services. It determines which companies meet that definition.

Apple does not disclose the apps it categorize­s as "reader" apps, but ebook readers such as Kindle, video and music streaming services such as Spotify, Netflix, AT&T'S HBO Max and Disney+ are likely to fall in this category.

When a user signs up for such a paid service from within an app, the subscripti­on is considered an in-app purchase, which means Apple requires the app to use its payment system and collects a commission.

Many music and video streaming services bypass those commission­s, which range from 15 to 30 per cent, by asking users to sign up and enter payment details on their websites rather than inside the app. Apple had prevented the developers from providing a link within their apps to do so.

WHAT’S NOT COVERED?

Payment for other services, such as video games, are not changed, according to Japanese authoritie­s, whose investigat­ion led to the new global policy, although the officials said they could investigat­e gaming transactio­ns in the future.

That means the biggest fight against Apple's policies, the antitrust court challenge by Fortnite maker Epic, continues. A judge is expected to deliver a decision soon in that case.

Apps offering physical goods or services, such as Amazon, Uber and Lyft, do not pay any fee because Apple does not consider their sales as "digital goods."

WHO WILL IT SATISFY?

Certainly not all. Many app developers, well beyond those making "readers," have expressed anger with Apple's tight rules and steep commission­s, leading antitrust regulators and lawmakers in several countries to examine how the company runs its App Store.

India launched a new antitrust case hours after Japan reached a settlement with Apple, while South Korea approved a bill to impose curbs on Google and Apple's payment policies.

"If they opened up to this because of regulatory pressure ... this could be a start to something, maybe even bigger where it is not only the reader apps but it could also include gaming and online dating apps," Evercore ISI analyst Shweta Khajuria said.

WHO WINS AND LOSES?

Subscripti­on and content companies like Netflix and Spotify will find it easy to sign up subscriber­s.

Users of such "reader" apps will find it easier to sign up from a link in the apps, many of which do not offer any instructio­ns on how to sign up outside the app and instead offer only a minimalist login screen for existing subscriber­s.

Apple is unlikely to lose significan­t revenue because many of the largest "reader" apps like Spotify and Netflix quit using the in-app payment systems years ago.

Any revenue losses for Apple are most likely to come from up-and-coming content apps that will now have an easier time signing up paid users outside the app and so may be less likely to use Apple's in-app payment system.

Even after the change, the extra step of following a link to an external site could discourage many users from completing the signup process.

Analysts said the changes would allow smaller developers, who do not have the scale to reach millions of users, to maintain a direct relationsh­ip with users.

"There probably will be some disappoint­ment that there weren't greater concession­s given," Susannah Streeter, a markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said.

"Apple is still in a fortress," she said, adding that the company is not going to show any weakness as it awaits a ruling in the Epic case.

 ?? MIKE SEGAR • REUTERS ?? The company logo hangs above the entrance to the Apple store on 5th Avenue in Manhattan.
MIKE SEGAR • REUTERS The company logo hangs above the entrance to the Apple store on 5th Avenue in Manhattan.

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