🤖 AI Summary
金融キャンペーン団体「Fairer Finance」の創設者ジェームズ・デイリー氏は、Appleのモバイル決済サービス「Apple Pay」について、英国で約1.5 億ポンド(約15億ドル)の集団訴訟を提起しました。訴訟は、AppleがiPhone上での非接触決済技術へのアクセスを他社に認めず、銀行やカード発行会社に業界慣行に合わない「隠れた手数料」を課したと主張しています。この手数料はAndroid端末(Google製)では発生せず、結果として英国の約5,000万人の消費者が、口座手数料やクレジットカード、貯蓄・住宅ローンなどの金融商品に上乗せされた形で負担しているとされています。訴訟は競争上訴審判所に提起され、同審が訴訟の進行可否を判断します。本件はApple Payに対する英国初の法的挑戦であり、同時期に競争市場庁(CMA)や決済システム規制当局がデジタルウォレットの監視を強化している背景でもあります。
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from the Guardian: The financial campaigner James Daley has launched a 1.5 billion pound (approximately $1.5 billion) class action lawsuit against Apple over its mobile phone wallet, claiming the U.S. tech company blocked competition and charged hidden fees that ultimately harmed 50 million UK consumers. The lawsuit takes aim at Apple Pay, which they say has been the only contactless payment service available for iPhone users in Britain over the past decade.
Daley, who is the founder of the advocacy group Fairer Finance, claims this situation amounted to anti-competitive behavior and allowed Apple to charge hidden fees, ultimately pushing up costs for banks that passed charges on to consumers, regardless of whether they owned an iPhone. It is the first UK legal challenge to the company's conduct in relation to Apple Pay, and takes place months after regulators like the Competition and Markets Authority and the Payments Systems Regulator began scrutinising the tech industry's digital wallet services. The case has been filed with the Competition Appeal Tribunal, which will now decide whether the class action case can move forward.
[...] Daley's lawsuit alleges that Apple refused to give other app developers and outside businesses access to the contactless payment technology on its iPhones, which meant it could charge banks and card issuers fees on Apple Pay transactions that his lawyers say "are not in line with industry practice." The lawsuit notes that similar fees are not charged on equivalent payments on Android devices, which are built by Google. It says that the additional costs were borne by UK consumers, having been passed on through charges on a range of personal banking products ranging from current accounts, credit cards, to savings and mortgages. The lawsuit says that about 98% of consumers are exposed to banks that listed cards on Apple Pay, meaning the vast majority of the UK population may have been affected.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.