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Regulators in the EU have pressured Apple into replacing Lightning with USB-C and adding RCS support
By supporting RCS, iPhone users will be able to get features like read receipts, typing indicators, high-quality photos and videos, and end-to-end encryption when messaging with an Android user.
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The EU is Apple’s two-letter headache
Apple has never allowed iPhone users to sideload apps because it means that users will be able to install apps that Apple cannot check for malware like it can with the apps in the App Store. But thanks to the DMA, Apple could be forced to allow sideloading next year, but it might only approve sideloading on iPhone units available in the EU’s 27 member states. Sideloading is still expected to be blocked by Apple in the U.S. and most other countries outside of those who are members of the EU.
Some changes forced on Apple by the EU, such as sideloading, will be allowed in the 27 member states only
The Digital Markets Act will take effect next March and will prevent companies from promoting their own services in the EU ahead of the competition. The tech giants will also be prevented from combining personal data collected from their various services. The DMA also states that data received from third-party merchants can not be used by the big tech firms to compete against these merchants.
When it comes to changing the Lightning ports to USB-C and supporting RCS, Apple decided that it would be too costly and time-consuming to make these changes only for iPhone units sold in the EU. But with sideloading, the stakes are too high for Apple to support third-party app stores worldwide. The potential for iPhone users to accidentally install a malicious app from an app storefront other than the App Store is just too great for Apple to allow sideloading in markets other than the EU where it is being pressured to allow it.
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