Apple TV, Siri Targeted in EU Broadcaster Complaint Citing DMA Rules - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Apple TV, Siri Targeted in EU Broadcaster Complaint Citing DMA Rules

A coalition of Europe's biggest broadcasters is pushing the EU to bring smart TV platforms like Apple TV and virtual assistants like Siri under the bloc's toughest tech regulation, reports Reuters.

european commission
The Association of Commercial Television and Video on Demand Services in Europe (ACT), whose members include Disney, NBCUniversal, Paramount+, and Sky, sent a letter on Monday to EU antitrust chief Teresa Ribera arguing that smart TV operating systems from Google, Amazon, Apple, and Samsung should be designated as gatekeepers under the Digital Markets Act (DMA).

Under the DMA, any platform with more than 45 million monthly active EU users and a market valuation above €75 billion is presumed to be a gatekeeper, subject to obligations designed to curb self-preferencing and increase interoperability.

To evidence their claim, the broadcasters cited market data showing Android TV's share grew from 16 percent to 23 percent between 2019 and 2024, while Amazon Fire OS climbed from 5 percent to 12 percent. Samsung's Tizen holds 24 percent, but Apple TV's share was not referenced.

The ACT also wants virtual assistants like Alexa and Siri brought under the DMA, arguing that the current lack of regulation has left AI assistants free to act as de facto gatekeepers for media content across phones, smart speakers, and car infotainment systems.

The European Commission confirmed it received the letter and is reviewing it. So far, Apple, Google, Amazon, and Samsung have not commented.

Apple's App Store, iOS, and Safari are already classified as DMA gatekeepers. A separate review into whether Apple Maps and Apple Ads meet the threshold was concluded last month, with regulators ruling that neither qualified due to low usage in Europe.

Notably, the broadcasters' letter asks the Commission to apply the DMA based on "qualitative criteria," even where platforms don't hit the usual quantitative benchmarks outlined in the regulations.

The request may sound like it's on shaky ground, but the DMA does actually have a provision for this circumstance – the EC can designate a company as a gatekeeper even if it doesn't meet the hard numeric thresholds stated above. It can look instead at factors like the platform's size, number of business users, network effects, lock-in, and structural market characteristics. In fact, this is how the Commission designated iPadOS as having gatekeeper status, even though it didn't meet the quantitative threshold.

In practice, though, the Commission is likely to be cautious about using this approach because it's messier than quantitative rules and easier to challenge in court. Apple is very likely to contest it, especially given that Apple TV's market share appears to be relatively small. Whether the same will apply to Siri is another matter, since it's tied to the iPhone and the EU already considers that a gatekeeper platform.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Related Roundup: Apple TV
Buyer's Guide: Apple TV (Don't Buy)

Top Rated Comments

IceCool Avatar
1 week ago

And once again, the stage is set for those clueless Americans to flaunt their ignorance and prejudice against the EU. I’m going to grab some popcorn.
Let me fix that for you:

“And once again, the stage is set for those clueless Europeans to flaunt their ignorance against government overreach. I’m going to grab some popcorn.”

You’re welcome ☺️
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago

And once again, the stage is set for clueless Americans to flaunt their ignorance and prejudice against the EU.
I’m going to grab some popcorn.
Seems clueless and ignorant of you to paint Americans with such a wide brush.

One need not be American to realize the folly of the EU with such out of touch, arbitrary determining factors of what a gatekeeper is that invites baseless complaints such as this.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago

And once again, the stage is set for clueless Americans to flaunt their ignorance and prejudice against the EU.
I’m going to grab some popcorn.
Rather than just grabbing that popcorn and quietly eating it, you flaunted your prejudice against Americans.... That's certainly one way to jump into this discussion! That's like doing a cannonball in an Olympic diving competition. ;)

Also, if you don't want to hear from "clueless Americans", it's a little hard for Americans to not be part of the discussion when most of the companies on both sides of this are American.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
surferfb Avatar
1 week ago
Even if the EU decided to meddle here, which I seriously doubt it will, I can't imagine this would apply to Apple given they only make the AppleTV box that consumers buy after the fact and don't have tvOS pre-installed on TVs.

That said, we are taking about EU regulators here, so.....
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago
It’s lobbying. You know why? All the Dinosaurs lose market shares because younger generations don’t watch them or linear TV. They don’t want to deal with Sky and it’s lock in and hard to cancel bs. Streaming made most of them irrelevant. They probably think: Guys the problem is not our content or what we offer. It must be the smart TV and Siri.

Attachment Image
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago

Look @Nekronos @neuropsychguy . This is exactly what I am talking about. What kind of post is this? Where are your comments and laughing reactions now, hm?
That's clearly partly in jest but not an unreasonable take and is certainly less dramatic than your comments. What exactly is it you are on about?

I initially thought your posts are just satire but clearly you are doing little more than trolling.

While the EU has had a few good points here and there, this is not one of them - the EU regulatory body has largely been acting like the bully it is supposedly trying to combat.

There is a reason why innovation out of the EU is limited and it is precisely because of stifling regulation such as this that while may or may not have started out of consumer interests ends up being more about control and politicians swinging a big stick than anything else.


Look @Nekronos @neuropsychguy . Broad brush, hm?
I hope you realize that is not a gotcha nor does take away from your own sweeping comments.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Politics | Sport | Travel | Lifestyle | Motoring