China regulator to review Apple antitrust complaint

epa06118471 (FILE) - Chinese fans line up outside the new Apple Store in Wangfujing shopping district in Beijing, China, 20 October 2012 (reissued 31 July 2017). According to media reports, Apple has removed around 60 Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) applications, for not complying with new regulations, from its App Store in China, where people use the VPN applications to be able to access websites that have been censored in the country.  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

Bloomberg

China’s State Administration for Industry and Commerce is reviewing an antitrust complaint accusing Apple Inc. of abusing its dominant position in smartphone applications, people familiar with the matter said.
The regulator is studying the information following a complaint filed on behalf of developers before deciding if a formal investigation is necessary, said the people, who asked not to be named because the matter isn’t public. The review is preliminary and Chinese antitrust agencies usually review such information before deciding whether a official probe is needed.
Beijing-based law firm Daxiao, or Dare & Sure, said earlier this month it filed complaints on the developers’ behalf to the SAIC and the National Development and Reform Commission. The lawyers accused Apple of removing apps without a proper explanation and taking an excessive 30 percent cut of in-app transactions, it said in an earlier statement. The law firm now represents close to 50 developers, producing games and a number of other apps, according to Lin Wei, managing partner of Dare & Sure.
Apple declined to comment, referring to an earlier statement saying it has guidelines for developers and an escalation process for apps it rejects.
SAIC’s antitrust bureau didn’t
answer calls from Bloomberg News seeking comment.
The complaint comes just as Apple is expected to introduce its 10th-anniversary iPhone, which could help it regain market share from local rivals such as Oppo and Huawei Technologies Co. Greater China, which includes Hong Kong and Taiwan, is Apple’s biggest overseas market, contributing about 18 percent of sales in the most recent quarter.
Chinese firms have complained of monopolistic practices by foreign companies in the past, spurring investigations and, in come cases, sanctions. Qualcomm Inc. in 2015 agreed to pay $975 million to settle a case brought by the NDRC that accused the company of abusing its control over mobile phone chips.
Apple itself has faced the ire of Chinese consumers and been on the receiving end of regulatory crackdowns. Apple’s iTunes Movies and iBooks services were shut down last year by regulators after less than seven months of operations, and revenue there has fallen for six consecutive quarters. In 2013, it was forced to apologise after state broadcaster CCTV criticised the company’s customer-service standards.

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