EU regulators have opened a new investigation following claims Apple is not complying with EU rules.
The European Commission – which started investigating Apple’s alleged non-compliance back in March – has accused Apple of breaching its Digital Markets Act, meaning Apple could face a fine of up to 10 percent of the firm’s global annual revenue. That may not sound like much, but when you consider that Apple generates £301bn ($383bn) a year, that’s a sizeable punishment.
Any further offences could even see the fine increased to 20 percent.
Apple, Google owner Alphabet, and Facebook owner Meta are all being investigated by the EU under the Digital Market Act (DMA), key legislation designed to keep competition fair.
Both Apple and Google are being investigated over their mobile app stores, which the EU previously ordered must allow greater competition on their respective platforms.
As Tom explained for us at the time, Apple’s previously-announced solution to satisfy DMA rules has drawn fire over its fees and limits, which make launching games or apps outside of the App Store costly – something long-time legal rival Epic Games boss Tim Sweeney called “hot garbage”.