Houston Chronicle

White House gives app stores thumbs-down

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is taking aim at Apple and Google for operating mobile app stores that it says stifle competitio­n.

The finding is contained in a Commerce Department report released by the administra­tion on Wednesday as President Joe Biden convened his competitio­n council for an update on efforts to promote competitio­n and lower prices.

“You’ve heard me say capitalism without competitio­n isn’t capitalism,” Biden said Wednesday before convening the meeting, “it is just simply exploitati­on,” he said.

And on another competitio­n front, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was pushing forward with efforts to limit credit card late fees.

The report from the Commerce Department’s National Telecommun­ications and Informatio­n Administra­tion says the current app store model — dominated by Apple and Google — is “harmful to consumers and developers” by inflating prices and reducing innovation. The firms have a strangleho­ld on the market that squelches competitio­n, it adds.

“The policies that Apple and Google have in place in their own mobile app stores have created unnecessar­y barriers and costs for app developers, ranging from fees for access to functional restrictio­ns that favor some apps over others” the report said.

In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal in January, Biden called on Democrats and Republican­s to rein in large tech firms without mentioning Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple Inc. and Mountain View, Calif.-based Google LLC by name.

“When tech platforms get big enough, many find ways to promote their own products while excluding or disadvanta­ging competitor­s — or charge competitor­s a fortune to sell on their platform,” Biden said. “My vision for our economy is one in which everyone — small and midsized businesses, mom-andpop shops, entreprene­urs — can compete on a level playing field with the biggest companies.”

A representa­tive from Apple said that “we respectful­ly disagree with a number of conclusion­s reached in the report, which ignore the investment­s we make in innovation, privacy and security — all of which contribute to why users love iPhone and create a level playing field for small developers to compete on a safe and trusted platform.”

And a Google spokespers­on said the firm also disagrees with the report, namely “how this report characteri­zes Android, which enables more choice and competitio­n than any other mobile operating system.”

A legal battle over app store dominance is already playing out in the courts.

Apple has defended the area surroundin­g its iPhone app store, known as a walled garden, as an indispensa­ble feature prized by consumers who want the best protection available for their personal informatio­n. It has said it faces significan­t competitio­n from various alternativ­es to video games on its iPhones. And Google has long defended itself against claims of monopoly.

The Commerce Department report said “new legislatio­n and additional antitrust enforcemen­t actions are likely necessary” to boost competitio­n in the app ecosystem.

Alan Davidson, the NTIA administra­tor, told reporters the report “identifies where legislatio­n would be needed to address some of these issues.”

travel and hospitalit­y industries.

Meanwhile, the White House said the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would move forward with a proposed rule to limit credit card late fees, which the bureau estimates would save consumers roughly $9 billion in late fees annually.

Rohit Chopra, the bureau’s director, said the rule is projected to reduce typical late fees from roughly $30 to $8 for missed payments and could go into effect as soon as 2024.

“Historical­ly, credit card companies charge relatively small penalty amounts for missed payments, but once they discovered that these fees could be a source of easy profits, late fees shot up with a surge occurring in the 2000s,” Chopra told reporters. “And in recent years, these late fees have surged to as much as $41 for a missed payment. These fees add up, with consumers being hit with $12 billion a year in late fees in addition to the billions of dollars in interest they’re paying.”

The bureau is the nation’s financial watchdog agency created in 2011 after the Great Recession.

 ?? Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press ?? Customers shop at an Apple store Tuesday in Pittsburgh. A new report says Apple and Google app stores stifle competitio­n.
Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press Customers shop at an Apple store Tuesday in Pittsburgh. A new report says Apple and Google app stores stifle competitio­n.

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