Global Gadgets

Apple Is Allowing Dutch Dating Apps to Use Other Payment Methods Within Their Apps

Apple Is Allowing Dutch Dating Apps to Use Other Payment Methods Within Their Apps

To help bring an end to wrangling with Dutch regulators that stretched over the last several months, today, Apple published a new version of its App Store rules that allow local dating apps to take payments through third-party processors. Until now, its proposals to comply with a December ruling mandating the change had not satisfied the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets (ACM) and earned Apple 50 million euros worth of fines.

Apple previously announced that it would allow dating apps to use alternative payment systems, but it imposed various conditions on how they could do so. Developers would have to submit a separate app binary for the Dutch App Store, and would have to choose between using its in-app payment system or a third-party version, rather than being able to offer both in the same app. And most notably, it said it intended to collect a 27 percent commission on payments made using alternative payment systems.

Now Apple is giving up on its insistence on a separate binary for apps that see outside payment systems. According to Apple, “This change means that developers may include either entitlement in their existing dating app, but still must limit its use to the app in the Netherlands storefront and on devices running iOS or iPadOS.” It also laid out more specifics on how to evaluate non-Apple payment system providers and examples for the pages apps need to present to customers to inform them they’re about to interact with a non-Apple payment service.

The company has consistently maintained its opposition to the ACM’s order, which Apple says will lead to threats to user privacy and data security. As Apple’s post for developers still says “we disagree with the ACM’s original order and are appealing it.” In the meantime, Apple will still insist on collecting that 27 percent commission on transactions for apps that link out or use a third-party payment system.

The ACM said on Monday that its next step is to present the policy to “market participants for consultation.” If they accept the terms, then Apple may avoid an escalation in fines.

The dispute with the Dutch competition regulator is limited in scope, and concerns just one kind of software on the App Store. But it’s part of a wave of antitrust scrutiny that Apple is facing around the world. The EU’s Digital Markets Act could require support for external payment processors in all apps after it goes into effect this fall, while South Korea recently passed a similar law. Apple’s in-app payments system was the focus of a recent high-profile court battle with Epic Games, which eventually resulted in a US judge ordering Apple to allow developers to link out to other payment options. The order was subsequently put on hold pending appeal.