Apple
will
soon
become
the
first
company
to
incur
a
fine
for
violating
the
European
Union’s
Digital
Markets
Act
(DMA),
reports
Bloomberg.
Sources
tell
the
outlet
that
the
Commission
is
getting
ready
to
levy
the
penalty
after
it
found
that
Apple’s
“anti-steering”
practices
harmed
competition
on
the
App
Store.
This
follows
the
EU’s
€1.84
billion (around
$2
billion)
fine
imposed
on
Apple
in
March.
After
investigating
a
complaint
from
Spotify,
the
EU
Commission
ruled
that
Apple
restricted
developers’
ability
to
point
users
to
cheaper
purchases
outside
the
App
Store
in
March
—
a
practice
that’s
illegal
under
the
DMA.
We
still
don’t
know
how
much
the
EU
will
fine
Apple,
but
the
DMA
rules
say
companies
can
be
charged
up
to
10
percent
of
annual
global
revenue
and
up
to
20
percent
for
repeat
offenses.
Based
on
Apple’s
revenue
last
year,
the
EU’s
initial
fine
could
add
up
to
as
much
as
$38
billion.
The
Commission
may
announce
the
fine
as
soon
as
this
month
before
competition
head
Margrethe
Vestager
leaves
office,
Bloomberg
reports.
The
Verge
reached
out
to
Apple
with
a
request
for
comment
but
didn’t
immediately
hear
back.
Apple
is
also
facing
an
investigation
over
whether
it’s
undermining
alternative
app
stores
in
the
EU.
In
September,
the
EU
won
its
fight
to
make
Apple
pay
€13
billion
(about
$14.4
billion)
in
unpaid
taxes.
Apple
CEO
Tim
Cook
even
allegedly
called
former
President
Donald
Trump
to
complain
about
the
fines
his
company
has
accrued.
Original author: Emma Roth
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