EU Court Orders Apple to Open App Store, Paving Way for Third-Party Apps and Services
July 9, 2026
A European Court of Justice ruling designates Apple as a gatekeeper under the Digital Markets Act, ordering Apple to open its App Store and operating systems to third-party apps and services and prohibiting preferential treatment for its own products.
The court confirms that Apple’s iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac, and Apple TV app-store variants form a single core platform service intended to connect software developers with end users.
Under the DMA, Apple must keep iOS open to rival app stores, permit sideloading, and allow competing services to connect to its platforms.
The July 27 decisions are binding specifications, not fines; non-compliance can trigger penalties up to 10% of Alphabet’s global turnover, with higher penalties or remedies for repeat or systemic infringements.
The DMA enforcement context includes previous EU fines against Google for Android ties and potential penalties for self-preferencing in search rankings, signaling a tougher enforcement phase.
The ruling signals regulators’ willingness to challenge tech giants and could influence global policy, including considerations for developers in places like Indonesia.
The July decisions will shape how rival AI services access Android OS interoperability points and data sharing, potentially enabling rivals to gain wake-word, system-entry, screen-context, and on-device data access similar to Gemini.
Practical implications include changes to data security and user privacy, requiring Apple to balance platform security with openness, possibly shifting business models toward more open competition.
The decision remains subject to appeal before the European Court of Justice, indicating potential further developments.
A sequencing rule prevents Google from obtaining pre-emptive injunctions to delay DMA specification proceedings against it, with a July 27, 2026 deadline enforcing immediate effect.
Interoperability under the DMA is now legally certain for developers, per FSFE, strengthening the case for competitive alternatives.
The ruling has broad implications for transatlantic regulatory dynamics and consumer experience in app distribution, payment choices, data access, and interoperability.
Summary based on 8 sources
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Sources

Cybernews • Jul 9, 2026
Apple loses fight to keep rivals out as Europe forces App Store open
Reclaim The Net: Free Speech, Privacy, Digital Rights • Jul 9, 2026
Apple Loses EU App Store Gatekeeper Appeal
https://eutoday.net • Jul 9, 2026
Apple Loses DMA Challenge in Early Test of Brussels' Big Tech Powers
Dataconomy • Jul 9, 2026
Apple Loses EU Court Fight Over App Store Gatekeeper Status - Dataconomy