Create Account
Log In
Dark
chart
exchange
Premium
Terminal
Screener
Stocks
Crypto
Forex
Trends
Depth
Close
Check out our Level2View


Apple To Forego App Store Cut, Letting Many Like Netflix, Spotify Process Payments Outside Of Its Systems


Benzinga | Sep 1, 2021 10:43PM EDT

Apple To Forego App Store Cut, Letting Many Like Netflix, Spotify Process Payments Outside Of Its Systems

Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) said Wednesday it would allow the likes of Spotify Technology S.A. (NYSE:SPOT), and Netflix Inc (NASDAQ:NFLX) to process payments outside its App Store, in effect, foregoing its cut.

What Happened: The Tim Cook-led company will now allow music, video, and other media apps to offer an in-app link so that subscribers can use external websites for signing up.

See Also: How To Buy Apple (AAPL) Shares

Apple's move is a part of the changes it is making to close an investigation by the Japan Fair Trade Commission, but the company said the change will apply globally to all "reader" apps on the App Store.

Reader apps give access to previously purchased content subscriptions for digital magazines, newspapers, books, audio, music, and video.

The changes don't apply to in-app purchases related to gaming, which will continue needing to use Apple's payment system.

Why It Matters: Apple said the change will go into effect in early 2022 but before that the company will update its guidelines and review process to "make sure users of reader apps continue to have a safe experience on the App Store."

Apple's in-app payment policies have evoked interest from regulators from around the world.

European Union antitrust regulators began looking into the App Store this year after Spotify complained about the 30% charges that Apple levies for the use of its in-app payments system.

See Also: Apple Offered Amazon Steep Discounts On App Store Fee To Lure Its Video Streaming App

Last year, Apple and Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) unit Google were taken to court by 'Fortnite' maker Epic Games over their in-app payments policies.

On Tuesday, lawmakers in South Korea passed a bill that effectively barred Apple and Google from charging their in-app cut on purchases made on their respective app stores in the country.

Failure to comply with the law would incur a fine of up to 3% of their South Korean revenue.

Price Action: On Wednesday, Apple shares closed 0.45% higher at $152.51 in the regular session and rose 0.43% in the after-hours trading.

Read Next: Apple Agrees To Change App Store To Settle Antitrust Lawsuit; App Store Profits Could Plummet






Share
About
Pricing
Policies
Markets
API
Info
tz UTC-4
Connect with us
ChartExchange Email
ChartExchange on Discord
ChartExchange on X
ChartExchange on Reddit
ChartExchange on GitHub
ChartExchange on YouTube
© 2020 - 2026 ChartExchange LLC