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Tim Cook Says Imminent Antitrust Policies Will Hurt iPhone User Privacy And Security

Tim Cook, CEO of Apple

A lot of global companies around the world are facing some kind of regulation or the other, no one is hardly left out. For Apple, the major regulations against it envelop user privacy and security.

Late last month, the EU announced imminent regulations targeted at the market dominance of Big Tech companies such as Apple. Called the Digital Markets Act, the goal of the imminent antitrust regulations is to ensure that these tech giants dominating the market do not abuse their position and cause harm to smaller rivals and to ensure that there is an enabling environment for these smaller companies to thrive. Apple’s CEO Tim Cook on Tuesday spoke against the incoming antitrust regulation in the US and the EU, emphasizing h0ow detrimental they would be to the users of their devices, as it would infringe on not only their security but also on their privacy.

The CEO made his opinion while speaking at the IAPP Global Privacy Summit in Washington. According to him, regulators are forcing the company to open up Apple’s security by allowing users of their devices to be able to install apps from the internet. Described as sideloading, Tim Cook said that this could mean opening the doors to malware and software that steals the data of users, as experienced by users of Android devices.

The CEO who is hugely against sideloading said that “Here in Washington and elsewhere, policymakers are taking steps in the name of competition that would force Apple to let apps on the iPhone that circumvent the App Store through a process called sideloading. That means data-hungry companies would be able to avoid our privacy rules, and once again track our users against their will.”

Apple devices are known to not allow users to download and install apps from the internet. Apps must be downloaded on its complementary App store which is safe. According to the CEO, sideloading “would also potentially give bad actors a way around the comprehensive security protections we put in place.” This may therefore not be only about protecting users, his concerns could also be about ensuring that the company’s long-standing efforts on user protection and privacy do not go to waste.

The EU aside, the US Senate Judiciary Committee has already approved the Open App Markets Act that’d permit sideloading, and this is expected to go through further debate in Congress later this year.

This will not be the first time Apple will be making an argument like this. The company has a history of reiterating the importance of user privacy and security, and why its “design’ should remain.

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