Reuters: the EU will charge Apple over anti-competitive practices with Apple Pay
The European Commission has put Appleâs business practices under a microscope recently. Earlier this year it found Apple App Store tax policy to be in breach with EUâs competition laws. Now Apple Pay is also facing regulatory action.
According to a report by Reuters, the Commission is preparing to charge Cupertino with anti-competitive practices over how the NFC chip on Apple Devices works, specifically that only Apple Pay is allowed to use it.
The statement of objection is expected to be sent to Apple next year. Depending on how things shake out, third-party mobile payment systems may enjoy better integration in future iOS versions. Right now Google Pay and others canât use the NFC chip to launch when near a point-of-sale terminal.
The investigation into Apple Pay was opened in June of last year. Here is what Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager had to say about it:
âIt appears that Apple sets the conditions on how Apple Pay should be used in merchants' apps and websites. It also reserves the âtap and goâ functionality of iPhones to Apple Pay. It is important that Apple's measures do not deny consumers the benefits of new payment technologies, including better choice, quality, innovation and competitive prices. I have therefore decided to take a close look at Apple's practices regarding Apple Pay and their impact on competition.â