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Sophisticatednut

macrumors 68020
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Apple is clear that it considers its commission to primarily be a licensing fee for use of its property and services.
What legal basis are a developer falling in this category?
what service are a developer using? Apple can’t require developer to register for any service?
How can a developer have free access to the hardware and API functions as described below if they are forced to pay a commission?
How can a competing application store compete on similar terms if they must pay a commission on all sales to Apple who runs their own store and have no fee for themselves?
If developers uses logos and iconography they would fall under a fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory(FRAND) terms.

The Digital Markets Act​

REGULATION (EU) 2022/1925 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL​

of 14 September 2022​

on contestable and fair markets in the digital sector and amending Directives (EU) 2019/1937 and​

(EU) 2020/1828 (Digital Markets Act)​


In these points that describe the intentions of the Digital Market Act
2-4,7,31,33-34,39-41,43-44,50,57,62,70,75

Article 2 Definitions​

Here all the legal definitions that EU uses are found.and will be future detailed further down.
  • 2: core platform service
  • 7: online social networking service
  • 10: operating system
  • 14 :software application stores
  • 15: software application
  • 16: payment service
  • 17: technical service supporting payment service
  • 18: payment system for in-app purchases
  • 19: identification service
  • 20: end user
  • 21: business user
  • 29: interoperability

(EU) 2015/2366​

(EU)2019/1150​

(EU)2015/1535​

Article 5​

There’s are the relevant Obligations for a Gatekeeper such as Apple.
  • 3-4,7-8​

Arricle 6​

  • 4,7,10​


Text with EEA relevance​

THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular Article 114 thereof

(2)An example of such characteristics of core platform services is extreme scale economies, which often result from nearly zero marginal costs to add business users or end users. Other such characteristics of core platform services are very strong network effects, an ability to connect many business users with many end users through the multisidedness of these services, a significant degree of dependence of both business users and end users, lock-in effects, a lack of multi-homing for the same purpose by end users, vertical integration, and data driven-advantages. All these characteristics, combined with unfair practices by undertakings providing the core platform services, can have the effect of substantially undermining the contestability of the core platform services, as well as impacting the fairness of the commercial relationship between undertakings providing such services and their business users and end users. In practice, this leads to rapid and potentially far-reaching decreases in business users’ and end users’ choice, and therefore can confer on the provider of those services the position of a so-called gatekeeper
(3)Some of those undertakings exercise control over whole platform ecosystems in the digital economy and are structurally extremely difficult to challenge or contest by existing or new market operators, irrespective of how innovative and efficient those market operators may be. Contestability is reduced in particular due to the existence of very high barriers to entry or exit, including high investment costs, which cannot, or not easily, be recuperated in case of exit, and the absence of, or reduced access to, some key inputs in the digital economy, such as data. As a result, the likelihood increases that the underlying markets do not function well, or will soon fail to function well.
(4)The combination of those features of gatekeeper is likely to lead, in many cases, to serious imbalances in bargaining power and, consequently, to unfair practices and conditions for business users, as well as for end users of core platform services provided by gatekeepers, to the detriment of prices, quality, fair competition, choice and innovation in the digital sector.
(7)Therefore, the purpose of this Regulation is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market by laying down rules to ensure contestability and fairness for the markets in the digital sector in general, and for business users and end users of core platform services provided by gatekeepers in particular.
(31)To safeguard the contestability and fairness of core platform services provided by gatekeepers, it is necessary to provide in a clear and unambiguous manner for a set of harmonised rules with regard to those services. Such rules are needed to address the risk of harmful effects of practices by gatekeepers, to the benefit of the business environment in the services concerned, of users and ultimately of society as a whole. The obligations correspond to those practices that are considered as undermining contestability or as being unfair, or both, when taking into account the features of the digital sector and which have a particularly negative direct impact on business users and end users. It should be possible for the obligations laid down by this Regulation to specifically take into account the nature of the core platform services provided. The obligations in this Regulation should not only ensure contestability and fairness with respect to core platform services listed in the designation decision, but also with respect to other digital products and services into which gatekeepers leverage their gateway position, which are often provided together with, or in support of, the core platform services.
(33)For the purpose of this Regulation, unfairness should relate to an imbalance between the rights and obligations of business users where the gatekeeper obtains a disproportionate advantage. Market participants, including business users of core platform services and alternative providers of services provided together with, or in support of, such core platform services, should have the ability to adequately capture the benefits resulting from their innovative or other efforts. Due to their gateway position and superior bargaining power, it is possible that gatekeepers engage in behaviour that does not allow others to capture fully the benefits of their own contributions, and unilaterally set unbalanced conditions for the use of their core platform services or services provided together with, or in support of, their core platform services. Such imbalance is not excluded by the fact that the gatekeeper offers a particular service free of charge to a specific group of users, and may also consist in excluding or discriminating against business users, in particular if the latter compete with the services provided by the gatekeeper. This Regulation should therefore impose obligations on gatekeepers addressing such behaviour.
(34)Contestability and fairness are intertwined. The lack of, or weak, contestability for a certain service can enable a gatekeeper to engage in unfair practices. Similarly, unfair practices by a gatekeeper can reduce the possibility of business users or others to contest the gatekeeper’s position. A particular obligation in this Regulation may, therefore, address both elements.
(39)In certain cases, for instance through the imposition of contractual terms and conditions, gatekeepers can restrict the ability of business users of their online intermediation services to offer products or services to end users under more favourable conditions, including price, through other online intermediation services or through direct online sales channels. Where such restrictions relate to third-party online intermediation services, they limit inter-platform contestability, which in turn limits choice of alternative online intermediation services for end users. Where such restrictions relate to direct online sales channels, they unfairly limit the freedom of business users to use such channels. To ensure that business users of online intermediation services of gatekeepers can freely choose alternative online intermediation services or direct online sales channels and differentiate the conditions under which they offer their products or services to end users, it should not be accepted that gatekeepers limit business users from choosing to differentiate commercial conditions, including price. Such a restriction should apply to any measure with equivalent effect, such as increased commission rates or de-listing of the offers of business users.
(40)To prevent further reinforcing their dependence on the core platform services of gatekeepers, and in order to promote multi-homing, the business users of those gatekeepers should be free to promote and choose the distribution channel that they consider most appropriate for the purpose of interacting with any end users that those business users have already acquired through core platform services provided by the gatekeeper or through other channels. This should apply to the promotion of offers, including through a software application of the business user, and any form of communication and conclusion of contracts between business users and end users. An acquired end user is an end user who has already entered into a commercial relationship with the business user and, where applicable, the gatekeeper has been directly or indirectly remunerated by the business user for facilitating the initial acquisition of the end user by the business user. Such commercial relationships can be on either a paid or a free basis, such as free trials or free service tiers, and can have been entered into either on the core platform service of the gatekeeper or through any other channel. Conversely, end users should also be free to choose offers of such business users and to enter into contracts with them either through core platform services of the gatekeeper, if applicable, or from a direct distribution channel of the business user or another indirect channel that such business user uses.
(41)The ability of end users to acquire content, subscriptions, features or other items outside the core platform services of the gatekeeper should not be undermined or restricted. In particular, a situation should be avoided whereby gatekeepers restrict end users from access to, and use of, such services via a software application running on their core platform service. For example, subscribers to online content purchased outside a software application, software application store or virtual assistant should not be prevented from accessing such online content on a software application on the core platform service of the gatekeeper simply because it was purchased outside such software application, software application store or virtual assistant.
43)Certain services provided together with, or in support of, relevant core platform services of the gatekeeper, such as identification services, web browser engines, payment services or technical services that support the provision of payment services, such as payment systems for in-app purchases, are crucial for business users to conduct their business and allow them to optimise services…. Gatekeepers should therefore not use their position to require their dependent business users to use any of the services provided together with, or in support of, core platform services by the gatekeeper itself as part of the provision of services or products by those business users. In order to avoid a situation in which gatekeepers indirectly impose on business users their own services provided together with, or in support of, core platform services, gatekeepers should also be prohibited from requiring end users to use such services, when that requirement would be imposed in the context of the service provided to end users by the business user using the core platform service of the gatekeeper. That prohibition aims to protect the freedom of the business user to choose alternative services to the ones of the gatekeeper, but should not be construed as obliging the business user to offer such alternatives to its end users.
(44)The conduct of requiring business users or end users to subscribe to, or register with, any other core platform services of gatekeepers listed in the designation decision or which meet the thresholds of active end users and business users set out in this Regulation, as a condition for using, accessing, signing up for or registering with a core platform service gives the gatekeepers a means of capturing and locking-in new business users and end users for their core platform services by ensuring that business users cannot access one core platform service without also at least registering or creating an account for the purposes of receiving a second core platform service. That conduct also gives gatekeepers a potential advantage in terms of accumulation of data. As such, this conduct is liable to raise barriers to entry and should be prohibited.
(50)The rules that a gatekeeper sets for the distribution of software applications can, in certain circumstances, restrict the ability of end users to install and effectively use third-party software applications or software application stores on hardware or operating systems of that gatekeeper and restrict the ability of end users to access such software applications or software application stores outside the core platform services of that gatekeeper. Such restrictions can limit the ability of developers of software applications to use alternative distribution channels and the ability of end users to choose between different software applications from different distribution channels and should be prohibited as unfair and liable to weaken the contestability of core platform services. To ensure contestability, the gatekeeper should furthermore allow the third-party software applications or software application stores to prompt the end user to decide whether that service should become the default and enable that change to be carried out easily.
(57)If dual roles are used in a manner that prevents alternative service and hardware providers from having access under equal conditions to the same operating system, hardware or software features that are available or used by the gatekeeper in the provision of its own complementary or supporting services or hardware…The gatekeepers should, therefore, be required to ensure, free of charge, effective interoperability with, and access for the purposes of interoperability to, the same operating system, hardware or software features that are available or used in the provision of its own complementary and supporting services and hardware.
(62)For software application stores, …gatekeepers should publish and apply general conditions of access that should be fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory. Those general conditions should provide for a Union based alternative dispute settlement mechanism that is easily accessible, impartial, independent and free of charge for the business user, without prejudice to the business user’s own cost and proportionate measures aimed at preventing the abuse of the dispute settlement mechanism by business users. … In particular, gatekeepers which provide access to software application stores are an important gateway for business users that seek to reach end users. …gatekeepers should not be allowed to impose general conditions, including pricing conditions, that would be unfair or lead to unjustified differentiation.
Pricing or other general access conditions should be considered unfair if they lead to an imbalance of rights and obligations imposed on business users or confer an advantage on the gatekeeper which is disproportionate to the service provided by the gatekeeper to business users or lead to a disadvantage for business users in providing the same or similar services as the gatekeeper. … prices charged or conditions imposed by the provider of the software application store for the same service the gatekeeper provides to itself. This obligation should not establish an access right...
(70)Given the substantial economic power of gatekeepers, it is important that the obligations are applied effectively and are not circumvented. To that end, the rules in question should apply to any practice by a gatekeeper, irrespective of its form and irrespective of whether it is of a contractual, commercial, technical or any other nature, insofar as the practice corresponds to the type of practice that is the subject of one of the obligations laid down by this Regulation. Gatekeepers should not engage in behaviour that would undermine the effectiveness of the prohibitions and obligations laid down in this Regulation. Such behaviour includes the design used by the gatekeeper, the presentation of end-user choices in a non-neutral manner, or using the structure, function or manner of operation of a user interface or a part thereof to subvert or impair user autonomy, decision-making, or choice. Furthermore, the gatekeeper should not be allowed to engage in any behaviour undermining interoperability as required under this Regulation, such as for example by using unjustified technical protection measures, discriminatory terms of service, unlawfully claiming a copyright on application programming interfaces or providing misleading information. Gatekeepers should not be allowed to circumvent their designation by artificially segmenting, dividing, subdividing, fragmenting or splitting their core platform services to circumvent the quantitative thresholds laid down in this Regulation.
(75)The Commission should investigate and assess whether additional behavioural, or, where appropriate, structural remedies are justified, in order to ensure that the gatekeeper cannot frustrate the objectives of this Regulation by systematic non-compliance with one or several of the obligations laid down in this Regulation. This is the case where the Commission has issued against a gatekeeper at least three non-compliance decisions within the period of 8 years, which can concern different core platform services and different obligations laid down in this Regulation, and if the gatekeeper has maintained, extended or further strengthened its impact in the internal market, the economic dependency of its business users and end users on the gatekeeper’s core platform services or the entrenchment of its position. A gatekeeper should be deemed to have maintained, extended or strengthened its gatekeeper position where, despite the enforcement actions taken by the Commission, that gatekeeper still holds or has further consolidated or entrenched its importance as a gateway for business users to reach end users.

Article 2 Definitions​

For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions apply as stipulated in the Digital Markets act and in relevance to Apple:


2)‘core platform service’ means any of the following:
(a)online intermediation services;
(b)online search engines;
(c)online social networking services;
(d)video-sharing platform services;
(e)number-independent interpersonal communications services;
(f)operating systems;
(5)‘online intermediation services’ means online intermediation services as defined in Article 2, point (2), of Regulation
(EU) 2019/1150;
(EU)2019/1150Article 2, point (2)
‘online intermediation services’ means services which meet all of the following requirements:
(a)
they constitute information society services within the meaning of point (b) of Article 1(1) of Directive (EU) 2015/1535 of the European Parliament and of the Council.
(b)
they allow business users to offer goods or services to consumers, with a view to facilitating the initiating of direct transactions between those business users and consumers, irrespective of where those transactions are ultimately concluded;
(c)
they are provided to business users on the basis of contractual relationships between the provider of those services and business users which offer goods or services to consumers;
(EU)2015/1535Article 1(1) point (b):
  • ‘at a distance’ means that the service is provided without the parties being simultaneously present;
  • ‘by electronic means’ means that the service is sent initially and received at its destination by means of electronic equipment for the processing (including digital compression) and storage of data, and entirely transmitted, conveyed and received by wire, by radio, by optical means or by other electromagnetic means;
  • ‘at the individual request of a recipient of services’ means that the service is provided through the transmission of data on individual request.
(7)‘online social networking service’ means a platform that enables end users to connect and communicate with each
other, share content and discover other users and content across multiple devices and, in particular, via chats, posts,
videos and recommendations;
(10)core platform service‘operating system’ means a system software that controls the basic functions of the hardware or software and enables software applications to run on it;

(14)
‘software application stores’ means a type of online intermediation services, which is focused on software applications
as the intermediated product or service;
(15)‘software application’ means any digital product or service that runs on an operating system;
(16)‘payment service’ means a payment service as defined in Article 4, point (3) of Directive (EU) 2015/2366;
(EU) 2015/2366Article 4, point (3)
‘payment service’ means any business activity set out in Annex I;
ANNEX I
PAYMENT SERVICES
(as referred to in point (3) of Article 4)
1.Services enabling cash to be placed on a payment account as well as all the operations required for operating a payment account.
2.Services enabling cash withdrawals from a payment account as well as all the operations required for operating a payment account.
3.Execution of payment transactions, including transfers of funds on a payment account with the user’s payment service provider or with another payment service provider:
(a)execution of direct debits, including one-off direct debits;
(b)execution of payment transactions through a payment card or a similar device;
(c)execution of credit transfers, including standing orders.
4.Execution of payment transactions where the funds are covered by a credit line for a payment service user:
(a)execution of direct debits, including one-off direct debits;
(b)execution of payment transactions through a payment card or a similar device;
(c)execution of credit transfers, including standing orders.
5.Issuing of payment instruments and/or acquiring of payment transactions.
6.Money remittance.
7.Payment initiation services.
8.Account information services.
(17)‘technical service supporting payment service’ means a service within the meaning of Article 3, point (j), of Directive
(EU) 2015/2366;
(EU) 2015/2366Article 3, point (j)
services provided by technical service providers, which support the provision of payment services, without them entering at any time into possession of the funds to be transferred, including processing and storage of data, trust and privacy protection services, data and entity authentication, information technology (IT) and communication network provision, provision and maintenance of terminals and devices used for payment services, with the exclusion of payment initiation services and account information services;
(18)‘payment system for in-app purchases’ means a software application, service or user interface which facilitates
purchases of digital content or digital services within a software application, including content, subscriptions,
features or functionality, and the payments for such purchases;
(19)‘identification service’ means a type of service provided together with or in support of core platform services that
enables any type of verification of the identity of end users or business users, regardless of the technology used;
(20)‘end user’ means any natural or legal person using core platform services other than as a business user;
(21)‘business user’ means any natural or legal person acting in a commercial or professional capacity using core platform
services for the purpose of or in the course of providing goods or services to end users;
(29)‘interoperability’ means the ability to exchange information and mutually use the information which has been
exchanged through interfaces or other solutions, so that all elements of hardware or software work with other
hardware and software and with users in all the ways in which they are intended to function;

Article 5 Obligations for gatekeepers​


3. The gatekeeper shall not prevent business users from offering the same products or services to end users through third-party online intermediation services or through their own direct online sales channel at prices or conditions that are different from those offered through the online intermediation services of the gatekeeper.

4. The gatekeeper shall allow business users, free of charge, to communicate and promote offers, including under different conditions, to end users acquired via its core platform service or through other channels, and to conclude contracts with those end users, regardless of whether, for that purpose, they use the core platform services of the gatekeeper.

7. The gatekeeper shall not require end users to use, or business users to use, to offer, or to interoperate with, an identification service, a web browser engine or a payment service, or technical services that support the provision of payment services, such as payment systems for in-app purchases, of that gatekeeper in the context of services provided by the business users using that gatekeeper’s core platform services.

8. The gatekeeper shall not require business users or end users to subscribe to, or register with, any further core platform services …as a condition for being able to use, access, sign up for or registering with any of that gatekeeper’s core platform services…


Article 6 Obligations for gatekeepers susceptible of being further specified under Article 8​


4. The gatekeeper shall allow and technically enable the installation and effective use of third-party software applications or software application stores using, or interoperating with, its operating system and allow those software applications or software application stores to be accessed by means other than the relevant core platform services of that gatekeeper.

7. The gatekeeper shall allow providers of services and providers of hardware, free of charge, effective interoperability with, and access for the purposes of interoperability to, the same hardware and software features accessed or controlled via the operating system…

10. The gatekeeper shall provide business users and third parties authorised by a business user, at their request, free of charge, with effective, high-quality, continuous and real-time access to, and use of, aggregated and non-aggregated data, including personal data, that is provided for or generated in the context of the use of the relevant core platform services or services provided together with, or in support of, the relevant core platform services by those business users and the end users engaging with the products or services provided by those business users.

List of relevant laws

(EU) 2022/1925 Digital Markets act​

The Directive 2009/24/EC
The Directive 2019/770/EU
The Directive 2019/771/EU
The Directive 2019/2161
The judgment in Case C-128/11 UsedSoft v Oracle
The judgment in Case C-166/15 Ranks v Microsoft Corp
The judgment in Case C-406/10 SAS Institute Inc. v World Programming Ltd
The judgment in Case C-355/12 Nintendo v PC Box Srl and Others
The judgment in Case T-172/21 Valve v Commission
The judgment in Case C‑307/18 Generics (UK) Ltd and Others
The judgment in Case C‑373/14 P Toshiba v Commission


The general principles that may affect the validity of EULAs in the EU are:

THIS IS FUNDAMENTAL EU CONTRACT LAW​

A CONTRACT (that is what EULA and Terms of Service are) MUST BE PRESENTED TO A CONSUMER BEFORE THE PURCHASE IS COMPLETED AND/OR TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP IS FINALIZED​

If the seller fails to fulfill this single obligation, then no contract is signed and the terms of the deal is a standard transfer of ownership.

  • The EULA must be presented to the user before the purchase or installation of the software, and the user must have the opportunity to review and accept it
  • The EULA must not contain terms that are unfair, unclear, or contrary to the mandatory provisions of the EU law. For example,
    • terms that limit the liability of the software supplier
    • restrict the user’s rights to use the software
    • Grant the software supplier access to the user’s personal data without consent
    • Not contain terms that are surprising, unclear, or unreasonable, or that disadvantage the consumer in a way that is incompatible with the principle of good faith.
    • must respect the user’s right to withdraw from the contract within 14 days of the purchase or installation of the software
  • The EULA can’t prevent the user from exercising their rights under the EU law, such as the right to decompile the software for interoperability purposes, the right to resell the software, or the right to benefit from the exceptions and limitations to the software protection.
 
Last edited:

Sophisticatednut

macrumors 68020
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May 2, 2021
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Scandinavia

Hypothetical case

A consumer bought the latest iPhone 15 from an Apple Store at full price in EU on January 15, 2024. The consumer wasn’t shown nor sign any agreement at the point of sale before finalizing the purchase.

they were only presented with the EULA after they started the smartphone, and that they had to accept the EULA in order to use the smartphone.
The consumer claim they own the device and software, and the EULA is invalid. Especially:

1. general, 2. Permitted License Uses and Restrictions, 3. Transfer.

- does the EULA comply with the EU legal jurisdiction and consumer protection laws, especially regarding the timing, the form, and the content of the “1. General, 2. Permitted License Uses and Restrictions, 3. Transfer” contract information?

- Does the consumer own the software included in the hardware, or does Apple retain the ownership of the operating system, based on the EU law and the nature of the purchase of the smartphone and the integrated operating system?

The first question is whether the EULA complies with the EU legal jurisdiction and consumer protection laws, especially regarding the timing, the form, and the content of the “1. General, 2. Permitted License Uses and Restrictions, 3. Transfer” contract information. The answer to this question is likely to be negative, for the following reasons:

  • The timing of the EULA is problematic, as it was presented to the consumer only after the purchase and the activation of the smartphone, and not before or at the point of sale. This means that the consumer did not have the opportunity to read and understand the terms and conditions of the EULA before entering into a contractual relationship with Apple, and that the EULA was imposed on the consumer as a condition for using the product that he or she had already paid for. This may violate the principle of transparency and the pre-contractual information requirements established by the Directive 2019/2161, which stipulate that the trader must provide the consumer with clear and comprehensible information about the main characteristics, the total price, and the duration and termination of the contract before the consumer is bound by it. Moreover, the EULA may also be considered as an unfair contract term under the Directive 93/13/EEC on unfair terms in consumer contracts, which provides that a contractual term which has not been individually negotiated shall be regarded as unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the parties’ rights and obligations arising under the contract, to the detriment of the consumer. According to the case-law of the Court of Justice, a term that is not individually negotiated and which is drafted in advance must be regarded as unfair if it is established that it causes a significant imbalance in the parties’ rights and obligations arising under the contract, to the detriment of the consumer. In this case, the EULA may be seen as creating such an imbalance, as it imposes on the consumer obligations and restrictions that are not proportionate to the rights and benefits that he or she receives from the contract, and that are not justified by a legitimate interest of Apple.
  • The clause 1. General states that the software included in the hardware is licensed, not sold, to the consumer, and that the consumer only acquires a limited, non-transferable, non-sublicensable license to use the software for personal, non-commercial purposes. This clause may be challenged by the consumer on the grounds that it contradicts the nature of the purchase of the smartphone and the integrated operating system, which should be regarded as a sale of goods, and not as a license of software, under the EU law. According to the Directive 2019/771/EU, a sale of goods occurs when a seller transfers or undertakes to transfer the ownership of goods to a consumer, and the consumer pays or undertakes to pay the price thereof. In this case, the consumer bought the smartphone from an Apple Store at full price, which implies that he or she paid the price for the ownership of the goods, and not for a mere license to use the software. Moreover, the operating system is an essential and inseparable part of the smartphone, which cannot function without it, and which cannot be replaced by another operating system. Therefore, the consumer should be considered as the owner of the operating system, as well as of the hardware, and should enjoy the full rights and benefits of ownership, such as the right to dispose of the goods, to modify them, or to transfer them to another person. This interpretation is supported by the principle of exhaustion of rights, as established by the Directive 2009/24/EC and the case-law of the Court of Justice, which states that once a copy of a computer program is sold in the EU with the consent of the rightholder, the rightholder cannot oppose the further distribution of that copy within the EU. In this case, Apple sold the copy of the operating system in the EU with its consent, and therefore, it cannot prevent the consumer from reselling or transferring that copy to another person. The clause 1. General may also be seen as an unfair contract term under the Directive 93/13/EEC, as it limits the consumer’s rights and freedoms as an owner of the goods, and imposes on him or her obligations and restrictions that are not proportionate to the rights and benefits that he or she receives from the contract, and that are not justified by a legitimate interest of Apple.
    • The clause 2. Permitted License Uses and Restrictions states that the consumer may only use the software in accordance with the user manual and the usage rules, and that the consumer may not copy, decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble, modify, create derivative works of, or disable any features of the software, or rent, lease, lend, sell, redistribute, or sublicense the software. This clause may be challenged by the consumer on the grounds that it violates the exceptions and limitations to the exclusive rights of the rightholder, as provided by the Directive 2009/24/EC and the case-law of the Court of Justice, which grant the lawful acquirer of a copy of a computer program the right to make a backup copy, to observe, study, or test the functioning of the program, and to decompile the program for interoperability purposes, without the authorisation of the rightholder. In this case, the consumer should be considered as the lawful acquirer of the copy of the operating system, as he or she bought it in the EU with the consent of Apple, and therefore, he or she should be entitled to exercise those rights, without being bound by the restrictions imposed by the EULA. The clause 2. Permitted License Uses and Restrictions may also be seen as an unfair contract term under the Directive 93/13/EEC, as it infringes the consumer’s rights and freedoms as an owner and a user of the goods, and imposes on him or her obligations and restrictions that are not proportionate to the rights and benefits that he or she receives from the contract, and that are not justified by a legitimate interest of Apple.
    • The clause 3. Transfer states that the consumer may not rent, lease, lend, sell, redistribute, or sublicense the software, and that the consumer may, however, make a one-time permanent transfer of all of his or her rights to the software to another party, provided that the transfer includes all of the software, including all its component parts, original media, printed materials and this license, and that the consumer does not retain any copies of the software, full or partial, including copies stored on a computer or other storage device. This clause may be challenged by the consumer on the grounds that it contradicts the principle of exhaustion of rights, as established by the Directive 2009/24/EC and the case-law of the Court of Justice, which states that once a copy of a computer program is sold in the EU with the consent of the rightholder, the rightholder cannot oppose the further distribution of that copy within the EU. In this case, Apple sold the copy of the operating system in the EU with its consent, and therefore, it cannot prevent the consumer from reselling or transferring that copy to another person, without being subject to the conditions and limitations imposed by the EULA. The clause 3. Transfer may also be seen as an unfair contract term under the Directive 93/13/EEC, as it restricts the consumer’s rights and freedoms as an owner of the goods, and imposes on him or her obligations and restrictions that are not proportionate to the rights and benefits that he or she receives from the contract, and that are not justified by a legitimate interest of Apple.

Conclusion: Based on the analysis, the likely outcome of the case is that the consumer would win the dispute against Apple, and that the EULA would be declared invalid or partially null and void, as it does not comply with the EU legal jurisdiction and consumer protection laws, especially regarding the timing, the form, and the content of the contract information. The legal position of the consumer is that he or she owns the software included in the hardware, and that he or she can exercise the full rights and benefits of ownership, without being bound by the EULA.
The strongest legal arguments that the consumer owns the operating system are based on the principle of exhaustion of rights, the principle of private ownership of goods, and the failure of Apple to stipulate the EULA terms before the sale was finalized.
 

Sophisticatednut

macrumors 68020
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Apple is clear that it considers its commission to primarily be a licensing fee for use of its property and services.
What legal basis are a developer falling in this category?
what service are a developer using? Apple can’t require developer to register for any service?
How can a developer have free access to the hardware and API functions as described below if they are forced to pay a commission?
How can a competing application store compete on similar terms if they must pay a commission on all sales to Apple who runs their own store and have no fee for themselves?
If developers uses logos and iconography they would fall under a fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory(FRAND) terms.

In these points that describe the intentions of the Digital Market Act
2-4,7,31,33-34,39-41,43-44,50,57,62,70,75

Article 2 Definitions​

Here all the legal definitions that EU uses are found.
  • 2: core platform service
  • 7: online social networking service
  • 10: operating system
  • 14 :software application stores
  • 15: software application
  • 16: payment service
  • 17: technical service supporting payment service
  • 18: payment system for in-app purchases
  • 19: identification service
  • 20: end user
  • 21: business user
  • 29: interoperability

(EU) 2015/2366​

(EU)2019/1150​

(EU)2015/1535​


Article 5​

There’s are the relevant Obligations for a Gatekeeper such as Apple.
  • 3-4,7-8​

Arricle 6​

  • 4,7,10​


Text with EEA relevance​

THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular Article 114 thereof



Article 2 Definitions​

For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions apply:



Article 5 Obligations for gatekeepers​



3. The gatekeeper shall not prevent business users from offering the same products or services to end users through third-party online intermediation services or through their own direct online sales channel at prices or conditions that are different from those offered through the online intermediation services of the gatekeeper.

4. The gatekeeper shall allow business users, free of charge, to communicate and promote offers, including under different conditions, to end users acquired via its core platform service or through other channels, and to conclude contracts with those end users, regardless of whether, for that purpose, they use the core platform services of the gatekeeper.

7. The gatekeeper shall not require end users to use, or business users to use, to offer, or to interoperate with, an identification service, a web browser engine or a payment service, or technical services that support the provision of payment services, such as payment systems for in-app purchases, of that gatekeeper in the context of services provided by the business users using that gatekeeper’s core platform services.

8. The gatekeeper shall not require business users or end users to subscribe to, or register with, any further core platform services …as a condition for being able to use, access, sign up for or registering with any of that gatekeeper’s core platform services…


Article 6 Obligations for gatekeepers susceptible of being further specified under Article 8​


4. The gatekeeper shall allow and technically enable the installation and effective use of third-party software applications or software application stores using, or interoperating with, its operating system and allow those software applications or software application stores to be accessed by means other than the relevant core platform services of that gatekeeper.

7. The gatekeeper shall allow providers of services and providers of hardware, free of charge, effective interoperability with, and access for the purposes of interoperability to, the same hardware and software features accessed or controlled via the operating system…

10. The gatekeeper shall provide business users and third parties authorised by a business user, at their request, free of charge, with effective, high-quality, continuous and real-time access to, and use of, aggregated and non-aggregated data, including personal data, that is provided for or generated in the context of the use of the relevant core platform services or services provided together with, or in support of, the relevant core platform services by those business users and the end users engaging with the products or services provided by those business users.
The CTF is a fee that Apple charges developers who use third-party app marketplaces or payment processors in the EU, starting from March 2024. The fee is €0.50 for each first annual install per year over a 1 million threshold, and 3% of the transaction value if developers use Apple as a payment processor. Apple claims that the fee is necessary to cover the costs of providing core platform services, such as security, privacy, and interoperability, to developers and users.

However, the CTF is illegal under the EU law, as it violates several clauses of the Digital Markets Act (DMA), which aims to ensure fair and contestable digital markets in the EU. The DMA imposes a number of obligations and prohibitions on gatekeepers, which are large online platforms that provide core platform services, such as app stores, search engines, or social networks. Apple has been designated as a gatekeeper for 22 core platform services, including the iOS App Store and Safari.

The CTF breaks the following DMA clauses:

  • Article 5 Obligations for gatekeepers
    7. The gatekeeper shall not require end users to use, or business users to use, to offer, or to interoperate with, an identification service, a web browser engine or a payment service, or technical services that support the provision of payment services, such as payment systems for in-app purchases, of that gatekeeper in the context of services provided by the business users using that gatekeeper’s core platform services.

    8. The gatekeeper shall not require business users or end users to subscribe to, or register with, any further core platform services …as a condition for being able to use, access, sign up for or registering with any of that gatekeeper’s core platform services…

  • The CTF prevents or restricts business users from offering better prices or conditions through alternative app marketplaces or payment processors, as it imposes an additional cost on developers and users who choose those options. This reduces the incentives and the benefits for developers and users to switch to alternative platforms or services, and creates an unfair advantage for Apple and its own services.
  • The CTF prevents or restricts end users from installing or using software applications of their choice, as it imposes an additional cost on users who download apps from alternative app marketplaces or pay through alternative payment processors. This reduces the attractiveness and the accessibility of alternative apps and services for users, and creates a lock-in effect for Apple and its own services.
  • The CTF prevents or restricts business users from accessing and interoperating with the core platform services that Apple provides, such as security, privacy, and interoperability features, as it imposes an additional cost on developers who use alternative app marketplaces or payment processors. This reduces the quality and the functionality of alternative apps and services for developers and users, and creates a competitive disadvantage for Apple’s rivals and a competitive advantage for Apple and its own services.
  • Article 6

    Obligations for gatekeepers susceptible of being further specified under Article 8

    4. The gatekeeper shall allow and technically enable the installation and effective use of third-party software applications or software application stores using, or interoperating with, its operating system and allow those software applications or software application stores to be accessed by means other than the relevant core platform services of that gatekeeper.

    7. The gatekeeper shall allow providers of services and providers of hardware, free of charge, effective interoperability with, and access for the purposes of interoperability to, the same hardware and software features accessed or controlled via the operating system…

    10. The gatekeeper shall provide business users and third parties authorised by a business user, at their request, free of charge, with effective, high-quality, continuous and real-time access to, and use of, aggregated and non-aggregated data, including personal data, that is provided for or generated in the context of the use of the relevant core platform services or services provided together with, or in support of, the relevant core platform services by those business users and the end users engaging with the products or services provided by those business users.
  • The CTF enables Apple to use, in competition with business users, the data generated by the developers and users who use alternative app marketplaces or payment processors, as it requires developers to report to Apple the number and the value of the transactions processed through alternative platforms or services. This gives Apple access to valuable and sensitive information about the performance, the preferences, and the behavior of its competitors and their customers, and allows Apple to use that information to improve its own products and services, or to target its own offers and advertisements.
Therefore, the CTF is a clear violation of the DMA, and should be declared illegal and abolished by the EU authorities. The CTF is a way for Apple to discourage developers from using alternative distribution and payment methods, and to maintain its dominance and profits in the app market, at the expense of the consumers’ rights and freedoms, and the competitors’ opportunities and innovation.



(16)‘payment service’ means a payment service as defined in Article 4, point (3) of Directive (EU) 2015/2366;
(EU) 2015/2366Article 4, point (3)
‘payment service’ means any business activity set out in Annex I;
ANNEX I
PAYMENT SERVICES
(as referred to in point (3) of Article 4)
1.Services enabling cash to be placed on a payment account as well as all the operations required for operating a payment account.
2.Services enabling cash withdrawals from a payment account as well as all the operations required for operating a payment account.
3.Execution of payment transactions, including transfers of funds on a payment account with the user’s payment service provider or with another payment service provider:
(a)execution of direct debits, including one-off direct debits;
(b)execution of payment transactions through a payment card or a similar device;
(c)execution of credit transfers, including standing orders.
4.Execution of payment transactions where the funds are covered by a credit line for a payment service user:
(a)execution of direct debits, including one-off direct debits;
(b)execution of payment transactions through a payment card or a similar device;
(c)execution of credit transfers, including standing orders.
5.Issuing of payment instruments and/or acquiring of payment transactions.
6.Money remittance.
7.Payment initiation services.
8.Account information services.
(17)‘technical service supporting payment service’ means a service within the meaning of Article 3, point (j), of Directive
(EU) 2015/2366;
(EU) 2015/2366Article 3, point (j)
services provided by technical service providers, which support the provision of payment services, without them entering at any time into possession of the funds to be transferred, including processing and storage of data, trust and privacy protection services, data and entity authentication, information technology (IT) and communication network provision, provision and maintenance of terminals and devices used for payment services, with the exclusion of payment initiation services and account information services;
(19)‘identification service’ means a type of service provided together with or in support of core platform services that
enables any type of verification of the identity of end users or business users, regardless of the technology used;
(20)‘end user’ means any natural or legal person using core platform services other than as a business user;
(21)‘business user’ means any natural or legal person acting in a commercial or professional capacity using core platform
services for the purpose of or in the course of providing goods or services to end users;
(29)‘interoperability’ means the ability to exchange information and mutually use the information which has been
exchanged through interfaces or other solutions, so that all elements of hardware or software work with other
hardware and software and with users in all the ways in which they are intended to function;
 

MBAir2010

macrumors 603
May 30, 2018
6,433
5,920
there
(20)‘end user’ means any natural or legal person using core platform services other than as a business user
(20a)‘end luser’ means any unnatural or illegal person using core platform services other than as a business user
 

Jim Lahey

macrumors 68030
Apr 8, 2014
2,523
5,203
I'm of the opinion that anyone who truly, truly cared about Apple's position on all of this stuff bought into the wrong brand and should have switched to an Android option donkey's years ago. But as I say that's just an opinion and not very constructive, so as you were...
 

Sophisticatednut

macrumors 68020
Original poster
May 2, 2021
2,396
2,236
Scandinavia
Is this a tutorial on the DMA?
Yes in regards to what’s relevant to apple currently
I'm of the opinion that anyone who truly, truly cared about Apple's position on all of this stuff bought into the wrong brand and should have switched to an Android option donkey's years ago. But as I say that's just an opinion and not very constructive, so as you were...
Well android as a system just sucks, and I’m for iOS becoming better for the users.
 

Jim Lahey

macrumors 68030
Apr 8, 2014
2,523
5,203
Well android as a system just sucks, and I’m for iOS becoming better for the users.

Sure, maybe, but my mother always told me to be careful what I wish for. Trying to turn iOS into something it isn't, and never was, may just bring us Android in a frock.

In any case I just find the whole controversy a little odd. Apple forces no one to do anything. Anyone can shop or do their business elsewhere. The EU's DMA, on the other hand, literally aims to brute force a company into designing something they don't want to make. Remind me again who plays the villain in this story...
 

Jim Lahey

macrumors 68030
Apr 8, 2014
2,523
5,203
Is this legal under DMA?

It's difficult to imagine that the minutiae wasn't all thrashed out among armies of lawyers prior to being made public, but I suppose it's possible. Maybe we'll get season 2 of this show pretty soon. My feeling is that concessions were made in return for something else. Something else that will never be made public.
 

eicca

Suspended
Oct 23, 2014
1,773
3,598
I'm of the opinion that anyone who truly, truly cared about Apple's position on all of this stuff bought into the wrong brand and should have switched to an Android option donkey's years ago. But as I say that's just an opinion and not very constructive, so as you were...
Trust me, I wish I could leave. But Apple has made it so inconvenient to abandon the "ecosystem..." It's malicious genius, really.
 

Jim Lahey

macrumors 68030
Apr 8, 2014
2,523
5,203
Trust me, I wish I could leave. But Apple has made it so inconvenient to abandon the "ecosystem..." It's malicious genius, really.

Sure, but what you're effectively saying there is that you value convenience over scruples. Doesn't sound like much of an argument for forcing a company into making something they don't want to make. The irony of the whole thing seems lost on its proponents. But hey ho. Each to their own 👍
 

Sophisticatednut

macrumors 68020
Original poster
May 2, 2021
2,396
2,236
Scandinavia
Sure, maybe, but my mother always told me to be careful what I wish for. Trying to turn iOS into something it isn't, and never was, may just bring us Android in a frock.

In any case I just find the whole controversy a little odd. Apple forces no one to do anything. Anyone can shop or do their business elsewhere. The EU's DMA, on the other hand, literally aims to brute force a company into designing something they don't want to make. Remind me again who plays the villain in this story...
Sure, but it’s about the goal of the EU. You can read article 101 and 102 when it comes to anticompetitive practices and fair markets to understand why EU does what it does. It’s quite literally following its constitutional obligations.

Conventional wisdom declares that the aim of domestic competition law (such as that of the UK) is to provide a remedy to litigants whose interests are damaged by the anti-competitive behaviour of others, whereas the EU takes a broader view and has the goal of maintaining transparent markets and a "level playing field".[2][3] Thus, the main objectives of the EU competition law are to maintain openness and to unify the internal market; to ensure economic efficiency in the marketplace; to ensure the conditions of effective competition and competitiveness; and to protect consumers.[4]

Source the founding treaties of EU and Wikipedia
 

DocDB

macrumors newbie
Jan 28, 2024
2
14
Here is the thing that no one has mentioned yet… this is all based on a minority of people with a loud voice saying this will be better for consumers.

It won’t. Why?

Because the main argument is “well if you don’t want to use an alternative App Store, you won’t have to”.

Hmmm… how is that going to play out? Everyone is going to go “exclusive”. The theory that developers will push their apps to all stores is laughable.

What will happen? It will be HARDER for average folk to get the apps they want and more likely to get scammed in the process.

Look at premier league rights in the UK: “it’s better for consumers to have competition to lower prices and no monopoly”. Ask any football fan if that’s how they feel, or if they would actually like an MLS pass like setup from 1 company, 1 way to watch and 1 bill to pay…

I love the EU but this really is such a silly move…
 

mode11

macrumors 65816
Jul 14, 2015
1,309
971
London
All I know is i can't wait to install arcade / console emulators on my iPad Pro without having to use AltStore (grateful as I am for that solution). For everything else I'll use Apple's App Store - most apps I use are free anyway.
 

AlexESP

macrumors 6502a
Sep 7, 2014
630
1,714
Well android as a system just sucks, and I’m for iOS becoming better for the users.
Fair point, we might prefer some OS but not like some specific point about it. But the problem is:
  • You consider sideloading would make iOS better for the users.
  • Apple and many other users consider it would make it worse.
If Apple decides what should be done and they’re wrong, they will be fully responsible for it, and it will affect their sales.

Now the EU decides what should be done, but they won’t be accountable for anything. No EU commissioner will loose money if this screws their citizens. However, Apple would still loose sales, reputation, receive customer complaints, etc. because their product is worse.

Without even getting into the content, I think this over-regulation trend of the EU will create perverse incentives, because no alternative visions are allowed in the market, and no one is so responsible for its products.

Think about it twice… you might like how this specific change affects you, but consider all the derived consequences of this kind of actions.
 

cupcakes2000

macrumors 68040
Apr 13, 2010
3,867
5,276
Now the EU decides what should be done, but they won’t be accountable for anything. No EU commissioner will loose money if this screws their citizens. However, Apple would still loose sales, reputation, receive customer complaints, etc. because their product is worse.
The regulations are what they are and on their own won’t make the Apple experience worse. Apple are choosing to make the experience worse by themselves by implementing them in the manner they seem to want to do.

They can easily find an elegant Apple-like solution that abides to the regs without causing havoc.

Instead they’re spitting out their dummies; fracturing their own ecosystem (like custom browser compliance on iOS, but as the compliance is not forced on iPadOS, disallowing it); only allowing separate App Store and not allowing an app from say GitHub to be installed; making it next to impossible, even potentially financially ruining, for an indie dev to offer a free app outside of apples own store.
 

AlexESP

macrumors 6502a
Sep 7, 2014
630
1,714
The regulations are what they are and on their own won’t make the Apple experience worse. Apple are choosing to make the experience worse by themselves by implementing them in the manner they seem to want to do.

They can easily find an elegant Apple-like solution that abides to the regs without causing havoc.

Instead they’re spitting out their dummies; fracturing their own ecosystem (like custom browser compliance on iOS, but as the compliance is not forced on iPadOS, disallowing it); only allowing separate App Store and not allowing an app from say GitHub to be installed; making it next to impossible, even potentially financially ruining, for an indie dev to offer a free app outside of apples own store.
Once again, this is what YOU think, but that doesn’t mean everyone needs to do the same! I think there is no ”Apple-like” solution that wouldn’t make a sideolading-enabled iOS worse than it currently is, that the EU is wrong, and any implementation of their act will make the iPhone a worse phone.

I think Apple’s solution is fine because, precisely, it strongly discourages anyone from trying to i.e. use customer browser engines. What would be surprising is that Apple, who has always thought this kind of measures are detrimental to users, wouldn’t try to do everything to hinder them as much as possible.
 

mode11

macrumors 65816
Jul 14, 2015
1,309
971
London
I think there is no ”Apple-like” solution that wouldn’t make a sideolading-enabled iOS worse than it currently is
No one's being forced to use a third party app store. The EU directive just gives you the option, should you want to. If you want to keep everything 100% Apple, as many people will, just do nothing different and continue as you were.

As ever with Apple, there's genuine points about security and stability, mixed in with an obvious profit motive. Apple's executives work for their board of directors, not the customer.
 

mode11

macrumors 65816
Jul 14, 2015
1,309
971
London
The majority of people is the millions of very happy iPhone customers, thanks to or despite the closed ecosystem.

People are iPhone customers for lots of reasons; the extent to which a closed ecosystem contributes to this is debatable. Many people won't care either way - a big chunk of iOS users (and likely Android users too) will just use the default app store and think no more of it.

In general, one can justify anything with reference to the iPhone's success - perhaps iPhone customers dislike headphone jacks and easily replaceable batteries too. Ultimately, all it really says is that on balance, they prefer iPhones to the only alternative, Android. Or don't care enough at this point to bother jumping ship.
 
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