Apple faces a second EU antitrust complaint as competitors claim they're being crushed by the App Store tax

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Tim Cook

  • Rakuten filed an antitrust complaint against Apple in the EU in March, the Financial Times reports.
  • Rakuten’s complaint focuses on Apple’s ebook service, which it says is in competition with its own ereader business Kobo.
  • Apple charges a 30% levy on in-app purchases, something Rakuten says unfairly raises prices on Kobo compared to Apple’s e-book service. 
  • The case is very similar to a complaint filed by Spotify last year.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Apple is facing a new accusation of abusing its monopoly.

In March Japanese tech company Rakuten, best known for its TV streaming service, filed an anti-competition complaint against Apple with the European Commission, the Financial Times reports.

Rakuten’s complaint doesn’t focus on streaming, but rather on Apple’s ebook business. Rakuten owns an ereader company called Kobo, whose app is hosted on Apple’s App Store.

Any app on the App Store which uses in-app payments has to use Apple’s payment system, which charges up to a 30% levy on each purchase. For Kobo, this means if it wanted to sell books through its free app it would have to pay a 30% commission on every book sold.

Sources familiar with Kobo’s complaint told the FT the company claims it misses out on business because in order to sidestep this tax it has to ask customers to go to its website to buy books. This is a similar workaround to Amazon, which doesn’t allow customers to buy audiobooks or ebooks through its iPhone app but directs them to its website instead.

Apple also has an ebook service called Apple Books. Rakuten’s claim is that it’s anti-competitive for Apple to charge a tax on Kobo, a competitor to Apple Books. Neither Apple nor Kobo were immediately available for comment when contacted by Business Insider.

This isn’t the first time a large company has complained about Apple’s App Store tax. In March 2019, European music streaming company Spotify lodged a similar complaint, accusing Apple of “acting as both a player and referee to deliberately disadvantage other app developers.” Spotify competes with Apple’s own music streaming service Apple Music. The European Commission has not yet reached a verdict on Spotify’s complaint.

Apple’s response to Spotify in 2019 was acerbic, saying the music streaming company “wraps its financial motivations in misleading rhetoric” and attacking its treatment of artists, calling it a “damaging step backwards for the music industry.” Kobo’s complaint in contrast has flown under the radar for three months.

Apple claims its App Store provides a strong economic ecosystem for developers, and on Monday said the App Store facilitated $519 billion in sales and billings in 2019.

Meanwhile, high-level antitrust concerns around tech companies are starting to swirl more generally, and the US House Judiciary Committee’s tech competition probe is planning to make tech CEOs including Apple’s Tim Cook testify before Congress in July.

SEE ALSO: Amazon faces multiple US antitrust probes as the coronavirus cements its dominance in online retail

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