EU Users Won’t Get Apple Intelligence, iPhone Mirroring, or the New SharePlay Screen Sharing Features This Year, Thanks to the DMA
The Financial Times:
Apple blamed complexities in making the system compatible with EU
rules that have forced it to make key parts of its iOS software
and App Store services interoperable with third parties.
“Due to the regulatory uncertainties brought about by the Digital
Markets Act,” Apple said on Friday, “we do not believe that we
will be able to roll out three of these features — iPhone
Mirroring, SharePlay Screen Sharing enhancements, and Apple
Intelligence — to our EU users this year.”
Kudos to Apple for breaking this news to the Financial Times, of all outlets. Poetry in media relations. Here’s the full on-the-record statement, provided to me by an Apple spokesperson:
Two weeks ago, Apple unveiled hundreds of new features that we are
excited to bring to our users around the world. We are highly
motivated to make these technologies accessible to all users.
However, due to the regulatory uncertainties brought about by the
Digital Markets Act (DMA), we do not believe that we will be able
to roll out three of these features — iPhone Mirroring, SharePlay
Screen Sharing enhancements, and Apple Intelligence — to our EU
users this year.
Specifically, we are concerned that the interoperability
requirements of the DMA could force us to compromise the
integrity of our products in ways that risk user privacy and data
security. We are committed to collaborating with the European
Commission in an attempt to find a solution that would enable us
to deliver these features to our EU customers without
compromising their safety.
None of these features are available yet in the developer beta OS releases, but it is my understanding that the first two — iPhone Mirroring and the new SharePlay Screen Sharing enhancements (where you’ll be able to see and doodle on the screens of others, like, say, if you’re providing remote how-to help to a friend or family member) — will be the next developer betas, coming early next week. Apple Intelligence won’t even enter beta until later this summer. But in the meantime, even in beta, none of these features will be available within the EU.
The Mac is not considered a “gatekeeping” platform in the EU, but the iPhone and iPad are, and the iPhone Mirroring and screen sharing features obviously involve those platforms. I think Apple could try to thread a needle here and release Apple Intelligence only on the Mac in the EU, but given how inscrutable the European Commission’s interpretation of the DMA is — where gatekeepers are expected to somehow suss out the “spirit of the law” regardless of what the letter of the law says — I don’t see how Apple can be blamed for pausing the rollout in the EU, no matter the platform.
The EU’s self-induced slide into a technological backwater continues.
★
The Financial Times:
Apple blamed complexities in making the system compatible with EU
rules that have forced it to make key parts of its iOS software
and App Store services interoperable with third parties.
“Due to the regulatory uncertainties brought about by the Digital
Markets Act,” Apple said on Friday, “we do not believe that we
will be able to roll out three of these features — iPhone
Mirroring, SharePlay Screen Sharing enhancements, and Apple
Intelligence — to our EU users this year.”
Kudos to Apple for breaking this news to the Financial Times, of all outlets. Poetry in media relations. Here’s the full on-the-record statement, provided to me by an Apple spokesperson:
Two weeks ago, Apple unveiled hundreds of new features that we are
excited to bring to our users around the world. We are highly
motivated to make these technologies accessible to all users.
However, due to the regulatory uncertainties brought about by the
Digital Markets Act (DMA), we do not believe that we will be able
to roll out three of these features — iPhone Mirroring, SharePlay
Screen Sharing enhancements, and Apple Intelligence — to our EU
users this year.
Specifically, we are concerned that the interoperability
requirements of the DMA could force us to compromise the
integrity of our products in ways that risk user privacy and data
security. We are committed to collaborating with the European
Commission in an attempt to find a solution that would enable us
to deliver these features to our EU customers without
compromising their safety.
None of these features are available yet in the developer beta OS releases, but it is my understanding that the first two — iPhone Mirroring and the new SharePlay Screen Sharing enhancements (where you’ll be able to see and doodle on the screens of others, like, say, if you’re providing remote how-to help to a friend or family member) — will be the next developer betas, coming early next week. Apple Intelligence won’t even enter beta until later this summer. But in the meantime, even in beta, none of these features will be available within the EU.
The Mac is not considered a “gatekeeping” platform in the EU, but the iPhone and iPad are, and the iPhone Mirroring and screen sharing features obviously involve those platforms. I think Apple could try to thread a needle here and release Apple Intelligence only on the Mac in the EU, but given how inscrutable the European Commission’s interpretation of the DMA is — where gatekeepers are expected to somehow suss out the “spirit of the law” regardless of what the letter of the law says — I don’t see how Apple can be blamed for pausing the rollout in the EU, no matter the platform.
The EU’s self-induced slide into a technological backwater continues.