The European Union issued a warning to Apple on Monday, stating that its App Store is breaching digital competition rules, potentially subjecting the iPhone maker to billions of dollars in fines.
This is the latest development in a protracted battle between Brussels and major tech firms, addressing issues ranging from data privacy to disinformation.
Stifling Competition
Brussels has imposed over €10 billion in fines on tech companies for abusing their dominant market positions. The recent threat to Apple follows a €1.8 billion ($1.9 billion) penalty three months ago for restricting European users from accessing cheaper music streaming services.
Among major tech firms, only Google has faced a larger single antitrust fine, exceeding €4 billion in 2018 for leveraging its Android operating system to promote its search engine. Google has also incurred billion-euro-plus fines for abuses in online shopping and advertising sectors.
Last year, the European Commission recommended that Google sell parts of its business, warning of a potential fine up to 10% of its global revenue for non-compliance.
Privacy
Ireland enforces the strictest data privacy fines, with local regulators overseeing the laws. Dublin, hosting the European offices of many big tech firms, saw its regulator penalize TikTok €345 million for mishandling children’s data last September, following a record €1.2 billion fine to Meta for illegal data transfers between Europe and the United States.
Previously, Luxembourg held the record for data fines, imposing a €746 million penalty on Amazon in 2021.
Taxation
The EU has struggled to compel tech companies to pay more taxes in Europe, where they are accused of funneling profits into low-tax jurisdictions like Ireland and Luxembourg. Notably, in 2016, the European Commission ordered Apple to pay Ireland €13 billion in back taxes, deeming a favorable deal with the government illegal. However, EU judges overturned the decision, a ruling the commission continues to challenge.
Similarly, the commission is appealing a court decision that overruled its order for Amazon to repay €250 million in back taxes to Luxembourg.
Disinformation and Hate Speech
Web platforms have long been criticized for failing to address hate speech, disinformation, and piracy. The EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), passed last year, mandates companies to tackle these issues or face fines up to 6% of their global turnover.
The bloc has already begun applying the DSA, opening investigations into Facebook and Instagram for not addressing election-related disinformation. Additionally, the EU has warned Microsoft that falsehoods generated by its AI search could violate the DSA.
Paying for News
Google and other online platforms have been accused of profiting from news without compensating content creators. To address this, the EU introduced “neighboring rights” allowing print media to demand payment for their content. France has tested these rules, and after initial resistance, Google and Facebook agreed to pay some French media for articles shown in web searches.
UK-based Nigerian alerts EFCC, CBN on danger of using card online
A Nigerian-British Chartered Engineer and Director of Information Security, Dr. Kingsley Chibuzor Aguoru, has petitioned the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission) EFCC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to halt card PIN usage for online payments to protect Nigerians from being fleeced of their hard-earned money.
He said he was making a passionate appeal to secure financial practices in the country.
The UK-based Chartered Engineer, with over 20 years of experience in financial technologies and security, said he was compelled to bring attention to the critical flaws in Nigeria’s current online card payment practices, which expose customers to unnecessary risks and significant danger.
According to Aguoru, the continued use of PIN in online transactions puts Nigerians at a grave risk of being defrauded.
Aguoru noted that card PINs were designed for face-to-face transactions at ATMs and POS terminals where secure encryption methods protect users rather than online usage.
In the petition cited by this paper, titled: “Urgent Call to Ban Card PIN Usage for Online Payments in Nigeria”, Dr. Aguoru explained: “In 2005, I developed a solution to tackle prevalent fraud in card-not-present transactions in the United Kingdom using both online and offline OTP models, drawing on Cartesian geometry.
“Although major networks like Visa and Mastercard declined the innovation at the time, my OTP model has since become a standard worldwide for authorization.
He advised the CBN to urgently step forward for the safety of Nigerian cardholders by banning the use of card pins for online transactions and mandating the use of OTPs or other dynamic authentication methods, such as authorization through mobile banking apps.
He noted that there was a need for consumers to be educated on safe online payment practices to minimise exposure to phishing and other cyber threats.
He said it was also necessary for the CBN to enforce industry-wide compliance with modern security standards to protect Nigerian customers, especially on the web, through policies, such as security, and payments compliance policies.
Aguoru emphasised that by adopting these measures, the CBN will greatly reduce the risk Nigerian consumers face and bring the nation’s payment systems in with international best practices.
Russia Fines Google $2.5 Decillion Over YouTube Bans – RBC
Google has racked up some 2 undecillion rubles ($2.5 decillion) worth of fines in Russia after years of refusing to restore the accounts of pro-Kremlin and state-run media outlets, the RBC news website reported Tuesday, citing an anonymous source familiar with court rulings against the tech company.
According to RBC’s sources, Google began accumulating daily penalties of 100,000 rubles in 2020 after the pro-government media outlets Tsargrad and RIA FAN won lawsuits against the company for blocking their YouTube channels.
Those daily penalties have doubled each week, leading to the current overall fine of around 2 undecillion rubles.
Undecillion is a number equal to 1 followed by 36 zeros. Google, whose parent company Alphabet reported a revenue of more than $307 billion in 2023, is unlikely to ever pay the incredibly high fine.
A total of 17 Russian TV channels have filed legal claims against Google, according to one of RBC’s sources. Among them are the state-run Channel One, the military-affiliated Zvezda broadcaster and a company representing RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan.
YouTube, which is owned by Google, blocked several Russian state-run media outlets over their support of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Authorities in Moscow retaliated with fines but stopped short of blocking the website.
Google’s Russian subsidiary filed for bankruptcy in the summer of 2022 and was officially declared bankrupt last fall. Alphabet Inc.’s Google had earlier halted advertising in Russia to comply with Western sanctions over the war in Ukraine.
Apple on Monday rolled out its first set of artificial intelligence features, dubbed “Apple Intelligence,” across its premium iPhone, iPad, and Mac devices, marking the tech giant’s major push into generative AI.
The release, first previewed by the company in June, marks Apple’s foray into an AI race that has seen the US tech giants rush into ChatGPT-style technology.
Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Apple are convinced that generative AI’s powers are the next chapter of computing and have ramped up spending so as not to be left behind.
“Apple Intelligence is generative AI in a way that only Apple can deliver, and we’re incredibly excited about its ability to enrich our users’ lives,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a blog post.
Apple’s new features include enhanced writing tools, improved photo searching capabilities, and a more conversational Siri virtual assistant.
The company also plans to integrate ChatGPT’s capabilities into its services by December.
Additional features planned for December include the ability to generate custom emoji and create images from text descriptions.
The features are largely being limited to the latest iPhones and iPads as well as Mac computers.
The powers of Apple Intelligence are for now only available in US English.
Versions in Chinese, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Korean and other languages will be released in the coming year.
At the launch event in June, Apple had postponed the launch of Apple Intelligence in the European Union indefinitely, due to “regulatory uncertainties” linked to new laws.
It now said that most offerings will be available in the EU on Mac computers in US English and will begin to be deployed on iPhones and iPads from April.
Apple Intelligence features also include system-wide writing tools that can rewrite and proofread text, and the ability to remove unwanted objects from images.
Overall, the features are similar to tools recently released by Meta, Microsoft and Google.
Amid concerns about the safety of AI models, the company said that its technology prioritizes user privacy by keeping processing on-device or by using a new “Private Cloud” system.
This, the company says, will keep personal data within the Apple ecosystem, which privileges data privacy.
Apple also unveiled a new desktop computer, the iMac, on Monday, that features Apple Intelligence.
The Nigerian telecommunication regulator, NCC, has disqualified Nigerians below the age of 18 from getting a Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) card.
Sources at the commission told PREMIUM TIMES that this policy is aimed to “protect minors” from the liabilities that arise from the usage of such SIMs.
One source, a senior official of the commission, told PREMIUM TIMES that parents and guardians can acquire SIMs in their names on behalf of their children and wards and assume any responsibilities or liabilities that may arise from the use of such SIMs.
The overall intent, according to sources, is to protect minors and strengthen national security.
NCC has been tweaking its telecommunications policies to combat security threats in Nigeria.
Constitutionally, 18 years is the age of consent in Nigeria.
NCC believes SIM acquisition is a contract between service providers and their subscribers, which requires the subscriber to have proper legal status, be of mature mind and be rational enough to bear certain responsibilities, obligations and liabilities imposed by a contract.
In 2021, the NCC proposed a Registration of Telephone Subscribers Regulations where it suggested banning minors in Nigeria from acquiring a SIM card. That regulation is now in effect, officials said.
One of the NCC officials said the policy will place a significant responsibility on parents to monitor the mobile activities of their minors.
This newspaper’s efforts to reach the NCC spokesperson were unsuccessful as at press time.
TikTok Deletes 2.1 Million Videos In Nigeria Over Guideline Violations — Report
TikTok said it removed over 2.1 million videos in Nigeria in the second quarter of 2024 for violating its community guidelines.
According to the Community Guidelines Enforcement Report shared on Tuesday, Tiktok said the action is part of the company’s ongoing efforts to enhance content moderation and create a safer platform for users.
“Key findings show that 99.1 per cent of these videos were proactively removed before users reported them, with 90.7 per cent taken down within 24 hours. These figures highlight TikTok’s commitment to staying ahead of harmful content, ensuring a safer platform for Nigerian users,” the report noted.
The affected videos represent less than 1 per cent of the total uploads in Nigeria during the reporting period.
Globally, TikTok said it removed over 178 million videos in June 2024, with 144 million of those removals facilitated through automated systems.
“With a proactive detection rate now at 98.2 per cent globally, TikTok is more efficient than ever at addressing harmful content before users encounter it,” the short-form mobile video platform stated.
It, however, assured that it would continue to invest in technologies aimed at improving content moderation and understanding potential risks.
It also reinforced its dedication to transparency and platform safety for its diverse user base in Nigeria and worldwide.
Meta on Friday provided a look at a generative artificial intelligence model it is working on that lets people create short videos, complete with audio, from text prompts and photos.
The tech titan touted “Meta Movie Gen” as a “breakthrough” when it comes to using an AI engine to crank out video and audio.
Meta said it will get feedback from filmmakers and creators as it eases toward making the video-generating AI engine publicly available.
No release plans for Movie Gen were disclosed.
“While there are many exciting use cases for these foundation models, it’s important to note that generative AI isn’t a replacement for the work of artists and animators,” Meta said in a post.
The model lets people use text prompts to create custom videos, including clips based on people’s photos, of up to 16 seconds long, according to Meta.
“Our model achieves state-of-the-art results when it comes to creating personalized videos that preserve human identity and motion,” Meta said.
“Imagine animating a ‘day in the life’ video to share on Reels and editing it using text prompts or creating a customized animated birthday greeting for a friend and sending it to them on WhatsApp.”
Movie Gen is the third wave of AI-powered video generation at Meta, according to the company.
The rise of AI-powered tools for creating realistic videos has prompted worries about “deepfakes” that pirate people’s likenesses.