The way we download apps onto our phones could be about to change after a ruling from the UK’s competition regulator.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has designated Apple and Google as having “strategic market status” – effectively saying they have a lot of power over mobile platforms.
This means the two tech giants may have to make changes, after the CMA said they “may be limiting innovation and competition”.
The ruling has drawn fury from the tech giants, with Apple saying it risked harming consumers through “weaker privacy” and “delayed access to new features”, while Google called the decision “disappointing, disproportionate and unwarranted”.
“We simply do not see the rationale for today’s designation decision,” Google competition lead Oliver Bethell said.
But the CMA said it did not “find or assume wrongdoing” from the firms.
“The app economy generates 1.5% of the UK’s GDP and supports around 400,000 jobs, which is why it’s crucial these markets work well for business,” said Will Hayter, the CMA’s executive director for digital markets.
The investigation into Apple and Google’s app stores, browsers and operating systems focused on how prominent their own apps are compared with rivals.
“Around 90-100% of UK mobile devices running on Apple or Google’s mobile platforms,” the CMA has previously said, adding this meant the firms “hold an effective duopoly”.
According to analysis from Uswitch, 48.5% of UK users have an iPhone – which runs Apple’s iOS operating system (OS) – with the vast majority of the rest using Google’s Android OS.
It comes after a separate decision taken in October, where the CMA designated Google’s search division as having strategic market status.
It is unknown exactly what changes the regulator will look to request, but in July it published roadmaps outlining potential measures it would take if the firms were found to have strategic market status.
These include requiring it to be easier for people to transfer data and easily switch between Apple and Android devices, and for both firms to rank apps “in a fair, objective and transparent manner” in their app stores.
Apple specifically may be required to allow alternative app stores on its devices, and let people download programs directly from companies’ websites.
Such a move would be a significant change to the so-called “closed system” which has defined iPhones since their inception, where apps can only be downloaded from Apple’s own App Store.
Both of these things are currently possible on Android devices – but the roadmap said Google may have to “change the user experience” of downloading apps directly from websites, as well as “remove user frictions” when using alternative app stores, such as listing them directly on the Google Play Store.
Android is an open-source operating system, which means developers can use and build on top of it for free.
Google argues this means it opens up competition.
Mr Bethell said “the majority of Android users” use alternative app stores or download apps directly from a developer’s website, and claimed there is a far greater range of apps available for Android users compared to those on Apple devices.
“There are now 24,000 Android phone models from 1,300 phone manufacturers worldwide, facing intense competition from iOS in the UK,” he said.
Meanwhile, Apple warned the UK could lose access to getting new features – as has happened in the EU – which the company blames on tech regulation.
For example, some Apple Intelligence features which have been rolled out in other parts of the world are not available in the EU.
“Apple faces fierce competition in every market where we operate, and we work tirelessly to create the best products, services and user experience,” the company said in a statement.
“The UK’s adoption of EU-style rules would undermine that, leaving users with weaker privacy and security, delayed access to new features, and a fragmented, less seamless experience.”
But consumer group Which? said curbs on these companies’ power in other countries “are already helping businesses to innovate and giving consumers more choice”.
“Their dominance is now causing real harm by restricting choice for consumers and competition for businesses,” said its head of policy and advocacy Rocio Concha.