Small apps unite to take on Apple, Google over unfair trade practices
For months, complaints from tech companies against Apple’s and
Google’s power have grown louder. Spotify, the music streaming app, criticised Apple for the rules
it imposed in the App Store. A founder of the software company Basecamp
attacked Apple’s “highway robbery rates” on apps. And last month,
Epic Games, maker of the popular game Fortnite, sued Apple and Google,
claiming they violated antitrust rules.
Now
these app makers are uniting in an unusual show of opposition against Apple and Google and the power
they have over their app stores. On Thursday, the smaller companies said they
had formed the Coalition for App Fairness, a nonprofit group that plans to push
for changes in the app stores and “protect the app economy”. The 13 initial
members include Spotify, Basecamp, Epic and Match Group, which has apps like Tinder and Hinge.
“They’ve
collectively decided, ‘We’re not alone in this, and maybe what we should do is
advocate on behalf of everybody,’” said Sarah Maxwell, a spokeswoman for the group.
She added
that the new nonprofit would be “a voice for many.”
Comments
Post a Comment