Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 17 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

Link to Story

Apple to Australians: You're Too Stupid to Choose Your Own Apps

Accepted submission by hubie at 2025-06-24 01:41:40
Digital Liberty

Apple to Australians: You're Too Stupid to Choose Your Own Apps [eff.org]:

Apple has released a scaremongering, self-serving warning aimed at the Australian government [neowin.net], claiming that Australians will be overrun by a parade of digital horribles if Australia follows the European Union's lead and regulates Apple's "walled garden."

The EU's Digital Markets Act [eff.org] is a big, complex, ambitious law that takes aim squarely at the source of Big Tech's power: lock-in. For users, the DMA offers interoperability rules [eff.org] that let Europeans escape US tech giants' walled gardens without giving up their relationships [eff.org] and digital memories [eff.org].

For small businesses, the DMA offers something just as valuable: the right to process their own payments. That may sound boring, but here's the thing: Apple takes 30 percent commission on most payments made through iPhone and iPad apps, and they ban app makers from including alternative payment methods or even mentioning that Apple customers can make their payments on the web.

[...] With the DMA, the EU is leading the world in smart, administrable tech policies that strike at the power of tech companies. This is a welcome break from the dominant approach to tech policy over the first two decades of this century, in which regulators focused on demanding that tech companies use their power wisely – by surveilling and controlling their users to prevent bad behavior – rather than taking that power away.

Which is why Australia is so interested. A late 2024 report from the Australian Treasury [treasury.gov.au] took a serious look at transposing DMA-style rules to Australia. It's a sound policy, as the European experience has shown.

But you wouldn't know it by listening to Apple. According to Apple, Australians aren't competent to have the final say over which apps they use and how they pay for them, and only Apple can make those determinations safely. It's true that Apple sometimes takes bold, admirable steps to protect its customers' privacy [cnbc.com] – but it's also true that sometimes Apple invades its customers' privacy (and lies about it) [gizmodo.com]. It's true that sometimes Apple defends its customers from government spying [eff.org] – but it's also true that sometimes Apple serves its customers up on a platter to government spies [macworld.com], delivering population-scale surveillance for autocratic regimes [nytimes.com] (and Apple has even been known to change its apps to help autocrats cling to power [vice.com]).

[...] Apple's claims about the chaos and dangers that Europeans face thanks to the DMA are even more (grimly) funny when you consider that Apple has flouted EU law with breathtaking acts [eff.org] of malicious compliance [apple.com]. Apparently, the European iPhone carnage has been triggered by the words on the European law books, without Apple even having to follow those laws!

[...] It's been a century since the last wave of trustbusting swept the globe, and while today's monopolists are orders of magnitude larger than their early 20th-century forbears, they also have a unique vulnerability.

Broadly speaking, today's tech giants cheat in the same way everywhere. They do the same spying, the same price-gouging, and employ the same lock-in tactics in every country where they operate, which is practically every country. That means that when a large bloc like the EU makes a good tech regulation, it has the power to ripple out across the planet, benefiting all of us – like when the EU forced Apple to switch to standard USB-C cables to charge their devices, and we all got iPhones with USB-C ports [theguardian.com].

[...] As Benjamin Franklin wrote, "He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening mine." It's wonderful to see Australian regulators picking up best practices from the EU, and we look forward to seeing what ideas Australia has for the rest of the world to copy.


Original Submission