Business Day

No Zuckerberg ‘like’ for Apple’s app policy

• Meta boss says it has too much control over 'mobile ecosystem'

- Brody Ford

Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg says Apple’s App Store presents a conflict of interest, adding his voice to a flurry of criticism of the iPhone maker’s software policies.

“It is problemati­c for one company to be able to control what app experience­s end up on a device,” Zuckerberg said in an interview at the New York Times DealBook conference on Wednesday. The “vast majority of profits in the mobile ecosystem go toward Apple”, he said.

App store policies and fees implemente­d by Apple, and to a lesser extent Google parent Alphabet, have long been a point of contention for technology companies looking to reach broad mobile audiences.

Billionair­e Elon Musk added to the chorus after his acquisitio­n of Twitter, sending a flurry of tweets this week, denouncing Apple’s fees and restrictio­ns on what apps can be sold.

Zuckerberg echoed some of Musk’s points. He called Apple’s content moderation rules for apps a “conflict of interest” since they are often pointed at rivals. It makes Apple “not just a governor looking out for people’s interests”.

Revenue at Meta, which owns social networks Facebook and Instagram, has taken a hit since Apple tightened its privacy policies to restrict how users can be tracked and targeted with advertisin­g.

Though Zuckerberg seemed to back up his objection to Apple’s policies, Musk on Wednesday walked back some of his criticism of the iPhone maker, saying he had met CEO Tim Cook and had a “good conversati­on” that resolved a “misunderst­anding” about Twitter’s place in the App Store.

As for Musk’s approach to running Twitter, Zuckerberg hedged his comments — he said he guesses some approaches will work and others won’t. “I think it’ll be very interestin­g to see how this plays out,” he said.

On whether Meta would allow former US president Donald Trump back onto Facebook, Zuckerberg did not answer, but pointed to prior guidance the company received from its external oversight board, weighing in on difficult content decisions. Meta is expected to make a decision in January.

Wall Street has become bearish on Meta’s investment in its money-losing virtual reality business amid slowing ad revenue. Earlier this month, Zuckerberg said the company would slash 11,000 jobs, and took personal responsibi­lity for decisions that led to the need to cut costs. In April, Meta reported its firstyet quarterly revenue drop.

The interview on Wednesday began with a recorded conversati­on between Zuckerberg and the moderator as avatars in the immersive digital world the company calls the metaverse. Still, Zuckerberg said the idea that Meta is wholly focused on the metaverse was “basically wrong”. Messaging program WhatsApp will be his next major monetisati­on target as that platform is “largely untapped”.

He cited progress in Reels, the company’s short video feature, saying some estimates show it has half the traffic of viral video-sharing app TikTok outside China.

He raised the issue of TikTok’s ownership by Beijingbas­ed ByteDance, adding there were “real questions” about the influence of China’s government on TikTok. “In a lot of countries, all data goes to the government,” he said.

IT IS PROBLEMATI­C FOR ONE COMPANY TO BE ABLE TO CONTROL WHAT APP EXPERIENCE­S END UP ON A DEVICE

Mark Zuckerberg Meta Platforms CEO

 ?? /Drew Angerer /Getty Images ?? Apple of discord: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says Apple’s content moderation rules for apps are ‘a conflict of interest’.
/Drew Angerer /Getty Images Apple of discord: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says Apple’s content moderation rules for apps are ‘a conflict of interest’.

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