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EU Accepts Apple’s Commitment to Open iPhone Payment System Amid Antitrust Issues

The European Union has accepted Apple’s pledge to open its ‘tap to pay’ iPhone payment system to competitors, thereby resolving an antitrust case and avoiding a significant fine.

The European Commission, the EU’s top antitrust authority, announced on Thursday that it has agreed to Apple’s commitments and will make them legally binding.

The Commission initially accused Apple in 2022 of abusing its market dominance by restricting access to its mobile payment technology.

In response, Apple proposed in January to allow third-party mobile wallets and payment services to utilize its contactless payment functionality within the iOS operating system.

After further tweaking its proposals based on testing and feedback, the Commission concluded that Apple’s final commitments adequately address its competition concerns. These changes will remain effective for a decade, covering the EU’s 27 countries, plus Iceland, Norway, and Liechtenstein, and will be monitored by a trustee.

Apple stated that it is offering European developers the option to enable contactless payments for a variety of applications, while continuing to support Apple Pay and Apple Wallet for users and developers.

(Disclaimer: With inputs from agencies.)