The UK government is poised to propose new regulations aimed at shaking up the domination of tech giants like Apple and Google, who have formed an “effective duopoly,” as per the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).

The plan involves slapping both tech giants with “strategic market status” designations, which would give regulators much more power to enforce rules designed to level the playing field.

The idea is to create more space for developer innovation and give consumers actual choices beyond the current two-horse race.

The regulators are pointing to murky app store ranking systems that nobody really understands, commission fees that take a hefty bite out of developer revenues, payment restrictions that force everyone through Apple and Google’s systems, and compatibility barriers that make it harder for apps and devices to work together seamlessly.

CMA’s challenge to Apple and Google duopoly

As per the CMA, Apple and Google’s stranglehold on mobile apps is stifling competition and innovation, and that’s bad news for both UK developers and regular consumers.

The numbers tell the story as somewhere between 90% and 100% of mobile devices in the UK run either iOS or Android, which means these two companies essentially control the entire mobile ecosystem.

The CMA has identified several problematic practices that flow from this dominance: app review processes that seem inconsistent and arbitrary, algorithms that appear to favor certain apps over others, and commission rates that can hit 30% on in-app purchases.

What really seems to bug the regulator is how these practices create a ripple effect throughout the mobile economy.

Developers face higher costs and fewer options for getting their apps noticed, while consumers end up with fewer choices and potentially higher prices.

The CMA also points out that developers often can’t even direct their own users toward alternative payment methods or subscription services without running into roadblocks.

Tech giants push back

Apple and Google aren’t exactly rolling over for these new rules.

Both companies are pushing back hard, arguing that the CMA’s proposals could seriously damage user privacy and security while hampering their ability to keep innovating.

Apple is being particularly direct about the potential consequences, pointing to what happened with the EU’s Digital Markets Act as a cautionary tale.

They delayed rolling out Apple Intelligence in Europe because of compliance headaches, and they’re warning the UK could face similar feature delays if these regulations go through.

Google is taking a different tack, emphasizing that Android is open-source and already promotes competition and choice in ways that Apple’s closed system doesn’t.

They’re calling for any new regulations to be grounded in solid evidence and strike a reasonable balance between promoting competition and maintaining innovation.

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