Apple
EU tells Apple Digital Markets Act isn’t going anywhere
Apple has already been slapped with a $570 million fine for anti-competitive App Store practices.

Apple’s charm offensive in Europe just hit a brick wall. After weeks of pleading for the European Union to scrap and rewrite its Digital Markets Act (DMA), EU officials responded with a very polite but unmistakable “absolutely not.”
Speaking to reporters, EU digital affairs spokesperson Thomas Regnier said the Commission has “no intention” of dismantling the landmark law, adding that Apple has “contested every little bit of the DMA since its entry into application.”
Passed in 2022, the DMA is the EU’s big swing at taming tech giants and giving smaller competitors a fighting chance. For Apple, it’s been a headache from day one.
The company has already been slapped with a $570 million fine for anti-competitive App Store practices, an amount Apple is appealing, naturally, and is facing ongoing scrutiny over everything from browser choice to cross-device interoperability.
This summer, regulators opened a public consultation to review the DMA, with a September 24 deadline for feedback. Apple dutifully filed a formal response but also blasted the law in a public blog post.
In it, the company argued the DMA is actually hurting the very users it claims to protect, warning of “higher risks of scams, exposure to harmful apps, and weakened security” for EU customers. (Via: Engadget)
Apple insists its walled garden isn’t just profitable, it’s for your own good.
The standoff comes as trade tensions simmer between Washington and Brussels.
President Donald Trump has grumbled about European regulators hammering American companies with massive fines, while reports suggest the penalties have quietly become bargaining chips in ongoing trade talks.
For now, the EU isn’t budging. The DMA remains intact, Apple remains annoyed, and European iPhone owners can expect more pop-ups and new app store options, whether they like it or not.
Consider it the price of democracy, or at least, the price of downloading apps outside Apple’s carefully manicured garden.
Is the EU’s firm stance on the Digital Markets Act necessary to prevent tech monopolies, or does Apple have a point that these regulations could compromise user security and experience? Should governments have the authority to force companies like Apple to open their ecosystems, or do consumers benefit more from the current walled garden approach with its integrated security and privacy protections? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
