Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

This EU law could force Apple to open up iMessage and the App Store

Add as a preferred source on Google

The EU’s Digital Markets Act (or DMA) has gone into force today. It could force Apple to open up the iPhone’s iMessage and app-buying platforms to third-party apps and services. Companies that fall afoul of the act could be fined up to 20% of global turnover. Apple has previously criticized the DMA for being a “blunt instrument.”

The DMA aims to allow smaller services to compete more equitably with larger ones. This means that companies with a certain number of users, labeled as gatekeepers, would have to make their platforms interoperable with smaller ones. Large platforms like Facebook or iMessage, for example, would be required to open up, while something like Signal could scrape by.

Someone holding an iPhone 14 with the display turned on.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

This law will also require platforms to open up app buying. This would not affect Google or Microsoft, both of whom allow third-party app stores on Android and Windows. It would open the way for Apple to introduce support for third-party app stores — at least in Europe.

Recommended Videos

“The DMA will change the digital landscape profoundly. With it, the EU is taking a pro-active approach to ensuring fair, transparent, and contestable digital markets. A small number of large companies hold significant market power in their hands. Gatekeepers enjoying an entrenched position in digital markets will have to show that they are competing fairly. We invite all potential gatekeepers, their competitors or consumer organizations, to come and talk to us about how to best implement the DMA,” Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager said in a release. The law will start to apply from May 2, 2023, after a six-month implementation stage.

The EU Digital Markets Act (VOSTEN)

Apple has previously come out against the DMA, saying in a submission: “The DMA, as proposed, is too blunt a tool. It equates size with harm and then imposes a one-list-fits-all set of regulatory obligations without providing an opportunity for the platform to explain, and the regulator to assess, whether — on balance — there are broader benefits to consumers or businesses.”

The EU’s DMA isn’t the only recent law that Apple was concerned with. The body previously mandated iPhones use USB-C rather than the company’s preference for its proprietary lightning cable. Apple’s VP of marketing, Greg Joswiak, said at a conference that it “would have been better environmentally and better for our customers to not have a government be that prescriptive.”

Michael Allison
Former Mobile News Writer
A UK-based tech journalist for Digital Trends, helping keep track and make sense of the fast-paced world of tech with a…
Samsung’s next Galaxy Z foldables will give you plenty of AI love with Gemini Intelligence
Gemini Intelligence could let the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Z Flip 8 handle multi-app chores from a single request
From mode from top on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.

Samsung’s next Galaxy Z models are expected to put mobile AI to work in a more practical way. The Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Galaxy Z Flip 8, according to Seoul Economic Daily, will reportedly ship with One UI 9 and Google’s new Gemini Intelligence, giving the devices a deeper assistant layer than current Galaxy AI features.

Gemini Intelligence is being positioned as software that can move through related apps and complete linked tasks. In practice, that means a phone assistant that can follow a chain of actions across apps, rather than stopping after a single reply.

Read more
Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide could break your heart with “modest” cameras
Leaked specs suggest the Fold 8 Wide's main camera won't quite match up to the standard Fold 8.
Samsung Galaxy Z Wide Fold

Samsung is preparing to shake up the foldable market this July with the rumored Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide, a new extra-wide variant of its flagship foldable expected to launch alongside the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8. But if you were hoping for top-tier camera specs on the wide foldable, you may want to temper your expectations.

No Ultra-tier main camera

Read more
Amazon says it isn’t making another phone, after burning itself with the Fire Phone
Amazon remembers the Fire Phone, and it isn’t rushing back
Amazon Fire Phone

Amazon's Fire Phone was a spectacular failure that marred the e-commerce giant's hardware attempt. More than a decade later, Amazon appears to be eyeing the mobile segment again with an AI twist. But it may not be preparing a straightforward smartphone sequel.

In a Financial Times interview, Amazon devices chief Panos Panay says that the company has no plans to simply try to build another phone. Panay said Amazon is "not necessarily going after phone," while acknowledging that mobile technology is changing and that new AI-powered form factors could blur the usual lines around what counts as a phone.

Read more