The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 03, 2025
Today: April 03, 2025

Apple hit with $162 million French antitrust fine over privacy tool

FILE PHOTO: Apple logo is seen on the Apple store at The Marche Saint Germain in Paris
March 31, 2025

By Florence Loeve and Foo Yun Chee

PARIS (Reuters) -Apple was hit with a 150 million euro ($162.4 million) fine by French antitrust regulators on Monday for abusing its dominant position in mobile app advertising on its devices via a privacy control tool.

The fine - the first by any antitrust regulator over Apple's App Tracking Transparency tool - comes a year after the European Union hit the company with a 1.8 billion euro antitrust fine for thwarting rival music streaming services on its App Store.

The head of the French Competition Authority dismissed worries that the decision would prompt retaliation from U.S. President Donald Trump who has threatened to slap fines on EU countries fining U.S. companies.

"We apply competition law in an apolitical manner," Benoit Coeure told a press conference.

"But what we have heard ... is that they (U.S. authorities) intend to apply antitrust law to the big digital platforms as strictly as their predecessors. So in terms of antitrust, I don't see any controversy between the United States and Europe on how we apply the law," he said.

The ATT tool lets iPhone and iPad users decide which apps can track their activity. Digital advertising and mobile gaming companies complained it made it more expensive and difficult for brands to advertise on Apple's platforms.

"While we are disappointed with today's decision, the French Competition Authority has not required any specific changes to ATT," Apple said in a statement.

Coeurรฉ told reporters the regulator had not spelled out how Apple should change its app, but that it was up to the company to make sure it now complied with the ruling.

The compliance process could take some time, he added, because Apple was waiting for rulings on regulators in Germany, Italy, Poland and Romania who are also investigating the ATT tool. The French case, which covered the period 2021 to 2023, was triggered by complaints from several associations for online advertisers, publishers and internet networks accusing Apple of abusing its market power.

"While the objective pursued by ATT is not in itself open to criticism, the way it is implemented is neither necessary nor proportionate to Apple's stated objective of protecting personal data," the regulator said in a statement.

It added that the privacy tool "particularly penalized smaller publishers," as they depend to a large extent on the collection of third-party data to fund their businesses.

Alliance Digitale, the Syndicat des Regies Internet (SRI), the Union des Entreprises de Conseil et d'Achat Mรฉdia (Udecam) and the Groupement des ร‰diteurs de Services en Ligne, which had complained to the French watchdog, said the decision was a significant victory for advertisers.

($1 = 0.9239 euros)

(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee, Florence Loeve and Gianluca Lo Nostro; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Related

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Wall Street futures in a tailspin as tariffs fuel recession fears

Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US|World

Trump's tariffs dull the dollar's safe-haven sheen

Australia|Business|Economy|Political|Stock Markets

Traders seek refuge in Aussie consumer staples as US tariffs spark market fall

Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

Trump tariffs will harm U.S. economy even without Europeean response, says Germany's Scholz

Local

Business|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

Rick Carusoโ€™s Palisades Village Mall announces potential reopening plans

Local|News

L.A. to expand protections for fast-food employees

Crime|US

Mother and Daughter Shot Dead in Compton in Drive-By

US|Local|News

Sergeant from Glendale among 4 killed in Lithuania training accident

Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Wall Street futures in a tailspin as tariffs fuel recession fears

Wall Street futures in a tailspin as tariffs fuel recession fears
Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US|World

Trump's tariffs dull the dollar's safe-haven sheen

Trump's tariffs dull the dollar's safe-haven sheen
Australia|Business|Economy|Political|Stock Markets

Traders seek refuge in Aussie consumer staples as US tariffs spark market fall

Traders seek refuge in Aussie consumer staples as US tariffs spark market fall
Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

Trump tariffs will harm U.S. economy even without Europeean response, says Germany's Scholz

Trump tariffs will harm U.S. economy even without Europeean response, says Germany's Scholz

Technology

Crime|Education|Technology|US

Cybersecurity professor targeted by FBI has not been detained, lawyer says

Cybersecurity professor targeted by FBI has not been detained, lawyer says
Business|Crime|Technology|US

Oracle tells clients of second recent hack, log-in data stolen, Bloomberg News reports

Oracle tells clients of second recent hack, log-in data stolen, Bloomberg News reports
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|Technology

Tesla quarterly sales plunge as Musk backlash grows

Tesla quarterly sales plunge as Musk backlash grows
Business|Economy|Stock Markets|Technology|US

Lucid's quarterly deliveries rise, Rivian's fall sharply

Lucid's quarterly deliveries rise, Rivian's fall sharply