You may think that Safari is one browser. Apple itself advertises it as the same browser on different devices but guess what? The company kept us in the dark all this time.
Apple says it has three browsers named Safari
DMA is a regulation that was rolled out last year to prevent tech giants from engaging in anticompetitive practices and imposing unfair conditions. Gatekeepers are platforms that are so dominant that consumers cannot avoid them.
- It achieves a certain turnover
- It provides a service to more than 45 million monthly active end users in the EU or 10,000 yearly active business users in the EU
- If the second criterion was met during the last three years
Safari meets the thresholds but only if you view it as one browser
The company says it offers five app stores and five operating systems and apart from iOS, these core platform services do not meet the usage level outlined in the legislation.
Apple reiterated its position that each of its Safari web browsers constitutes a distinct [core platform service]. According to Apple, Safari on iOS, Safari on iPadOS and Safari on macOS qualify as web browsers within the meaning of [the DMA requirements].” – European Commission
Apple’s approach violates the DMA’s Anti-Circumvention provision that warns against subdividing the market share of a platform to skirt regulation.
The commission has identified six issues with Apple’s claims and has concluded that “Safari qualifies as a single web browser, irrespective of the device through which that service is accessed.”