Telegram Is the Latest Company to File An EU Antitrust Complaint Against Apple

Big-time app developers are piling on to fight against the app store.

By Daniel Cooper

NurPhoto/Getty Images via engadget

This story originally appeared on Engadget

If big tech thought that its antitrust reckoning would end with yesterday's hearings, it'll have its optimism sorely dented by what's likely to follow. A number of smaller players are lobbing grenades over the fence in the hope of forcing regulators on both sides of the Atlantic to intervene. Today, secure messaging app Telegram is joining in, filing a formal antitrust complaint to the European Union's competition authority.

As the Financial Times points out, it's the third big name, after Spotify and Rakuten, that has lobbied the EU to do something about the App Store's lock-in and 30 percent commission. And here, as then, the general sentiment is that the commission is too high, and that not allowing users to download apps from other sources is harming competition.

A few days ago, Telegram co-founder and CEO Pavel Durov published an open letter concerning Apple's "30 percent tax on apps." That includes a claim that running the app store does not cost what Apple generates in revenue, and that app-store fees did not exist in the PC era. Durov added that companies also cannot simply build apps for Android instead, thanks to the sheer size of iOS' install base.

Related: 7 Simple Ways to Build Your Community on Telegram

It's not clear if these arguments, which broadly amount to saying that Apple has too much money, and is too popular, will carry weight with the EU. After all, if Margrethe Vestager is going to build a case, she needs to prove that what Apple is doing is stifling competition and harming users. But even if Telegram's argument is weak, it's clear that every developer with an axe to grind against Apple is going to use this as an opportunity.

Daniel Cooper
After training to be an intellectual property lawyer, Dan Cooper abandoned a promising career in financial services to sit at home and play with gadgets. He now serves as Engadget's associate European editor.

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