The Korea Times

EU hails change as Apple opens App Store to competitio­n

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— The European Union’s digital enforcer celebrated on Friday the “change” underway in the tech world after Apple yielded to a new EU law by announcing it would allow alternativ­e app stores on the iPhone for the first time.

The significan­t overhaul, which will take place in March when the European Union’s sweeping Digital Markets Act comes into force, will curtail the dominance of the App Store, which has been a mainstay of the iPhone since 2008.

“The DMA will open the gates of the internet to competitio­n so that digital markets are fair and open,” European internal market commission­er Thierry Breton said when asked by AFP about Apple’s announceme­nt. “Change is already happening.”

Breton said that from March 7, when the law comes into force, the European Commission will assess the proposals of tech companies, “with the feedback of third parties.”

“If the proposed solutions are not good enough, we will not hesitate to take strong action,” he warned. He said the DMA means “more choice for consumers and more opportunit­ies for smaller innovative tech companies.”

With the major changes announced by Apple on Thursday, users will for the first time be able to download software from outside the App Store and they will be given new options to process payments.

Other changes include giving users the option to download an alternativ­e web browser when they first open Safari in the latest version of the iOS operating system. Until now, users had to go into the settings to change the default browser.

In its announceme­nt, Apple criticized the DMA for creating “privacy and security risks” and said the company is installing safeguards to reduce them.

Apple said the new options for processing payments and downloadin­g apps “open new avenues for malware, fraud and scams, illicit and harmful content.”

“Even with these safeguards in place, many risks remain,” it said.

“The changes we’re announcing today comply with the Digital Markets

Act’s requiremen­ts in the European Union, while helping to protect EU users from the unavoidabl­e increased privacy and security threats this regulation brings,” said Apple’s Phil Schiller, who leads the App Store.

The EU has bolstered its legal armory to rein in Big Tech, with stricter rules to protect European users online and to boost competitio­n in an industry dominated by U.S. giants such as Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.

Companies found infringing the Digital Markets Act expose themselves to fines that could reach as high as 20 percent of their global turnover, or even orders to be broken up in serious cases.

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