Apple disagrees with Japanese claims that built-in apps harm competition

What you need to know

  • Apple says it doesn't agree with Japan's concerns about the way it bundles Safari with iPhones.
  • A Japanese report had previously also suggested that third-party App Stores should be allowed.

Japanese authorities are concerned about a number of things relating to Apple and Google.

Apple says that it disagrees with a report by Japanese authorities that suggests the inclusion of Safari pre-installed on devices harms competition. The same report also floats the idea that App;e should allow people to install apps from multiple app stores.

The report itself isn't aimed only at Apple — Google also came in for the same criticism. While Google has yet to respond, saying that it is still looking into Japan's concerns, Apple was much quicker to argue its corner according to Kyodo News.

The U.S. technology giant said in a statement, "We respectfully disagree with a number of conclusions" in the government report released the same day that expressed concern over the strong influence of Apple and Alphabet Inc.'s Google LLC in the OS market.

Apple added that it is facing "intense competition in every segment" in which it operates, adding that it will continue to "engage constructively with the Japanese government."

It's thought that Japanese authorities are concerned that by bundling their own web browsers on devices, Apple and Google are making it more difficult for competing apps to get a foothold.

In the interim report released following discussions about digital market competition, the government sees the Google and Apple internet browsing apps being preinstalled in smartphones as a problem.

The same report also notes that developers are "paying a high fee to Apple as they can only distribute their products through the company's store." As a result, talk of allowing users to install apps via an app store of their choice is also being floated.

This is far from the first time that Apple has found itself fighting for its App Store life, of course. The accusation that shipping a web browser pre-installed hurts competition is also an old one — it was leveled at Microsoft back in 2009 over the way it bundled Internet Explorer on all Windows PCs, too.

Whether you feel that Safari is the best iPhone browser or not, it's easy to see why it being preinstalled could put other apps at a disadvantage.

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