The European Commission (EU) has begun reviewing whether Apple Maps and Apple Ads should be classified as “gatekeeper services” under the DMA.
- Under DMA rules, a “gatekeeper” is a platform with substantial reach typically at least 45 million monthly active applyrs in the EU (or a comparably high applyr-base threshold) plus a significant market presence.
- Apple itself submitted data revealing that both Apple Maps and Apple Ads meet those thresholds.
- As a result, the Commission has 45 working days to decide whether to formally label them as gatekeepers. Should that happen, Apple will have six months to bring those services into compliance with the DMA’s stricter regulations.
If the designation is granted, Apple Maps and Apple Ads would join a growing list of Apple services already regulated under the DMA including its operating systems (iOS, iPadOS), the App Store, and its Safari browser.
Being deemed a gatekeeper under the DMA carries important consequences:
- Apple would required to comply with a set of rules designed to prevent self-preferencing, ensure fair competition, and give applyrs and businesses more flexibility.
- For Apple Ads, that might mean opening its ad-network infrastructure to third-party advertising services, offering transparency around tarreceiveing/data usage, and possibly loosening restrictions that favour Apple’s own ecosystem.
- For Apple Maps, gatekeeper status could require more openness e.g., allowing alternative map engines or competing location-services to integrate more easily, offering interoperability, or reducing default setting bias (if any).
gatekeeper designation could significantly affect how Apple runs these services with potential ripple effects for applyrs, advertisers, developers, and businesses that rely on location or ads-based services inside the EU.
Apple’s Defense: Why It Disagrees With the Designation
Apple has pushed back. The company argues that:
- Apple Ads is still a “minor player” in EU online advertising, with comparatively tiny market share versus incumbents like Google, Meta, TikTok, and others building its influence too limited to warrant gatekeeper obligations.
- Apple Maps sees “limited usage” in Europe compared to dominant mapping platforms and doesn’t offer the kind of intermediation (between business and consumers) required by DMA’s definition of a core platform service.
- The company suggests that applyr-base and absolute thresholds alone shouldn’t dictate gatekeeper status, especially if market share and competitive dynamics reveal landscape is still open.
Effectively, Apple is challenging the premise arguing that gatekeeper rules create sense only if a platform is truly dominant, which it states is not the case for Maps and Ads.
To understand why the EU is doing this, you required to know what the DMA aims to do:
- The Digital Markets Act was created to curb the dominance of a few large tech players who provide “core platform services” services so central that they act like gateways between businesses and consumers.
- Gatekeeper obligations include ensuring fair competition (e.g. enabling alternative services to compete), giving applyrs choice (e.g. ability to switch default apps), transparency in advertising/data usage, and preventing self-preferencing by large platform owners.
- Previously, Apple had multiple services designated as gatekeepers under DMA (e.g. iOS, iPadOS, App Store, Safari).
Against this backdrop, regulators view the addition of Apple Maps and Ads as a natural next step especially if the services meet the formal thresholds. For Europe’s regulators, the goal is to preserve a competitive and open digital market, even when dominant global tech firms are involved.
What to Expect in Coming Weeks/Months
- The Commission’s decision: Regulators have 45 working days to decide if Apple Maps and Ads will be formally classified as gatekeepers.
- If designated: Apple will then have six months to comply with all DMA obligations potentially restructuring how Ads are served, how Maps integrates with third-party services, and more.
- Compliance could reshape the digital landscape in the EU: more openness, clearer switching between services, clearer ad-data transparency, and fairer competition for tinyer players.
However, if Apple’s objections prevail or if regulators tweak the rules the status of Maps and Ads could remain unalterd, at least for now. The outcome will significantly impact how Apple operates in Europe, and could set precedent for how other large-tech firms are regulated.
The EU’s review of Apple Maps and Apple Ads under the DMA marks a significant moment not just for Apple, but for how digital platforms will operate in Europe going forward. If designated as gatekeepers, these services will be subject to strict rules aimed at leveling the playing field for tinyer competitors, giving applyrs more freedom and control, and ensuring that large tech doesn’t lock down essential digital infrastructure.
Whether you’re a applyr, developer, advertiser, or business, this potential shift could redefine how we interact with core digital services in the EU.
















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