• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

EU slaps Apple with nearly $2B fine for music streaming violation

Draugoth

Gold Member
web1_2024030407038-65e5b9c7df90154b51577cbdjpeg.jpg;w=960

The European Union leveled its first antitrust penalty against Apple on Monday, fining the U.S. tech giant nearly $2 billion for breaking the bloc’s competition laws by unfairly favoring its own music streaming service over rivals.

Apple muzzled app developers from telling users where they could go to pay for cheaper music subscriptions instead of paying through iOS apps, said the European Commission, the 27-nation bloc’s executive arm and top antitrust enforcer.

“This is illegal. And it has impacted millions of European consumers who were not able to make a free choice as to where, how and at what price to buy music streaming subscriptions,” Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s competition commissioner, said at a news conference in Brussels.

Apple — which said it contests the decision — behaved this way for a decade, resulting in “millions of people who have paid two, three euros more per month for their music streaming service than they would otherwise have had to pay,” she said.

Source
 

DeafTourette

Perpetually Offended
web1_2024030407038-65e5b9c7df90154b51577cbdjpeg.jpg;w=960

The European Union leveled its first antitrust penalty against Apple on Monday, fining the U.S. tech giant nearly $2 billion for breaking the bloc’s competition laws by unfairly favoring its own music streaming service over rivals.

Apple muzzled app developers from telling users where they could go to pay for cheaper music subscriptions instead of paying through iOS apps, said the European Commission, the 27-nation bloc’s executive arm and top antitrust enforcer.



Apple — which said it contests the decision — behaved this way for a decade, resulting in “millions of people who have paid two, three euros more per month for their music streaming service than they would otherwise have had to pay,” she said.

Source

Good! Mega-corps are an evil that needs to be eradicated!
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
This only works when 1 company makes the device, runs the software on the device, has a music service of its own, and can reserve the best usability features for itself in order to 'justify' more $$$.

Apple should have never been allowed to be a content producer and distributor.
 

Cyberpunkd

Member
FYI, this is something more complex than „favouring it’s own music services”. Basically Apple didn’t tell users that by signing up for a service outside iOS ecosystem they will not pay a dollar or two extra.
All apps where you can subscribe via your iPhone charge extra due to „Apple tax” e.g. Spotify. If you sign up via a website the price is lower for the same service.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
I havent read the details or anything, I'm just by what's posted, but how is this any different than a supplier selling stuff to a grocery store, and the grocery store telling them dont go around telling people it's cheaper at Walmart or directly from your own website?
 

Soodanim

Gold Member
Both the US and EU approved the Microsoft acquisition of Activision Blizzard. Only the UK dissented

The EU only fines these corporations for the free money, they couldn't give less of a fuck about consumers
I don't think it's quite that bad, some of the regulations are leading the way. Forcing Apple to go to USB-C, for example. There's also Apple having to allow 3rd party app stores.
 

Goalus

Member
Both the US and EU approved the Microsoft acquisition of Activision Blizzard. Only the UK dissented
They would have lost in court if they had not given their approval.

They were eager to defend Sony though, so you might have a point. Just not in the way you think.

This only works when 1 company makes the device, runs the software on the device, has a music service of its own, and can reserve the best usability features for itself in order to 'justify' more $$$.

Apple should have never been allowed to be a content producer and distributor.
No one is forced to buy an Apple device. In fact, Apple is the only big tech company that can be completely avoided without losing any bit of convenience. Apple will never see a single cent from me, and I don't have to sacrifice anything for that.
 
Last edited:

YCoCg

Gold Member
I havent read the details or anything, I'm just by what's posted, but how is this any different than a supplier selling stuff to a grocery store, and the grocery store telling them dont go around telling people it's cheaper at Walmart or directly from your own website?
I'm not sure how it is in the US but here in the UK stores can advertise what products are cheaper and list rivals prices.
 

sankt-Antonio

:^)--?-<
And consumers are free to not choose Apple products if they feel like it. There are alternatives.
Not if there isn’t any meaningful competition that can’t thrive because Apple and Google are suffocating the market.

Apple buys every 3nm chip produced, no small business can compete or outspend them.

Or when Apple uses its funds to pay thousand's engineers to patent stuff, not to use it but to make it hard for others to compete etc.

Or when they put arbitrary software gates into their products to make it less compelling using Apple alternatives on their hardware.
 

Bojji

Member
And consumers are free to not choose Apple products if they feel like it. There are alternatives.

The invisible hand of the market, amirite?

Captain America Lol GIF by mtv

Not if there isn’t any meaningful competition that can’t thrive because Apple and Google are suffocating the market.

Apple buys every 3nm chip produced, no small business can compete or outspend them.

Or when Apple uses its funds to pay thousand's engineers to patent stuff, not to use it but to make it hard for others to compete etc.

Or when they put arbitrary software gates into their products to make it less compelling using Apple alternatives on their hardware.

Yep, Apple and Google created duopoly.

Free market and "consumers choice" only work correctly when there is a lot of competition but two trillion dollars corporations are not really competing very much when they basically own the market.
 

AJUMP23

Parody of actual AJUMP23
I wish the US government had the plums to watch out for consumers instead of their clients (mega-corporations) like the EU does.

The EU nor the US gov are looking out for the little guy. Neither ae your friend, they just want more ways of generating revenue. Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
 
The EU nor the US gov are looking out for the little guy. Neither ae your friend, they just want more ways of generating revenue. Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
If a bully punches the other bully who has been punching me lately, and it means I'm not getting punched for a few minutes, I'll take it.
 

AJUMP23

Parody of actual AJUMP23
Depends on if it dissuades Apple from obfuscating pricing in the future and whether I would've been suckered into it. Like $3?
They will find another way. I have no faith in the corporations of the governments. I do however like a free market. And the only person that can protect the consumer is the consumer.
 

Erebus

Member
Yep, Apple and Google created duopoly.

Free market and "consumers choice" only work correctly when there is a lot of competition but two trillion dollars corporations are not really competing very much when they basically own the market.
This was not always the case though. In the past, there was more competition, and Apple wasn't a trillion-dollar company when it introduced the first iPhone.
 

YCoCg

Gold Member
This was not always the case though. In the past, there was more competition, and Apple wasn't a trillion-dollar company when it introduced the first iPhone.
You should watch BlackBerry if you haven't seen it, a good insight to the chaos of the phone industry when Apple dropped the iPhone and how carriers flipped to data instead of call time, etc.
 
Last edited:

Bojji

Member
This was not always the case though. In the past, there was more competition, and Apple wasn't a trillion-dollar company when it introduced the first iPhone.

This "trillion dollar companies" thing is reflectively new, Apple was still massive company when they introduced Iphone and they used their influence (fanboys, connections and money) to get to the top quickly. Some small company couldn't do that.
 

Panajev2001a

GAF's Pleasant Genius
What percentage of the 2 Billion are you getting.
It does not matter, the point is that Apple is fined enough to take it seriously. They could burn the money for all I care. Maybe it should go to charities, maybe it should go to public works, etc… it does not matter. If it is put to good use great, but the point of punitive damages is to hurt the big companies abusing their position and power…

Otherwise breaking the law becomes just an operational cost.
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom