Apple to allow third-party app stores in Brazil to settle iOS case with regulator

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Apple will allow other app stores besides its own ‍in the tech giant’s iOS operating system in Brazil to settle a three-year ⁠case with the country’s antitrust regulator CADE, both parties said on Tuesday.

An internal panel at CADE formed a majority to accept Apple’s proposal of an agreement, CADE said in ‌a statement.

Apart ‌from the app stores, the agreement also orders Apple to allow for third-party payment processing methods for ‌in-app purchases besides its own, or links to external websites for transactions.

Apple said in a statement it will make the changes to comply with CADE demands, but that these moves will open privacy and security risks to users.

The California-based company said it has “worked to maintain protections against some threats,” but that “these safeguards will not eliminate every ‌risk.”

The probe ‍started after a complaint filed in 2022 by Uruguay-based e-commerce ‍platform MercadoLibre over Apple’s alleged restrictions on the distribution ‌of digital goods and on in-app purchases.