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Apple Says India's Antitrust Case Against It Is 'Copy-Pasted'

Apple has accused Indian antitrust investigators of "copy-pasting" claims from its rivals and failing to conduct their own analysis, arguing the regulator's findings against it should be thrown out.

apple india
In a June 25 submission to the Competition Commission of India (CCI) reviewed by Reuters, Apple escalated its long-running dispute with the regulator, where Match and a group of Indian startups are among its opponents. The CCI's investigators privately concluded in 2024 that Apple had engaged in "abusive conduct" on the App Store and wrongly mandated the use of its own payment system.

Apple has denied the allegations. The company said it is a "minuscule player" with under 6% of India's smartphone market, and argued the investigation's conclusions rest on rivals' claims rather than the CCI's independent work. It warned that "forced alterations to Apple's carefully designed ‌App Store‌ could disrupt its integrated business model," and that remedies would "create regulatory uncertainty and could deter investments in India's digital economy."

In its submission, Apple provided tables intended to show the CCI's investigation team had simply reproduced filings from opponents in the case, including Match, Walmart's Indian payments app PhonePe, and Indian rival Paytm. "The DG [Director General] made no effort whatsoever to independently verify or critically assess these statements, often parroting them verbatim," Apple said.

Apple also claimed the CCI "blindly replicated" a graphic on worldwide consumer spending on mobile apps and games drawn from a 2024 EU ruling against the company, despite India facing different market conditions. In its own case, Google argued that Indian investigators had copied parts of a European ruling, but it had little effect on the final ruling resulting in forced changes to promotion of Android.

Apple is also arguing that officials failed to grant it "a single opportunity to record its statements and provide oral evidence" during the probe, in contrast to Google, which it says was given several chances to defend itself.

The regulator has accused Apple of stalling the case for more than two years by withholding responses and pursuing a parallel challenge to India's antitrust penalty law, which allows for fines of up to 10% of a company's turnover over the previous three years. That law lets India base any penalty on global rather than local turnover, the basis on which Apple has estimated its potential exposure at as much as $38 billion. Apple is separately contesting in a New Delhi court whether the law, which took effect in 2024, should apply to the full 2022–2024 period in question.

Apple had refused to supply global financial documents for that period before agreeing to cooperate in early June 2026, ultimately submitting only its local Indian turnover after requesting a "final extension" that ran to June 25, which was the same day it filed its copy-pasting accusation.

The dispute comes as India grows ever more central to Apple's business. The country is set to make 26% of the world's iPhones in 2026, up from 6% four years ago.

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.

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Top Rated Comments

BC2009 Avatar
4 days ago at 09:07 am
Any law that bases its penalties on a company's global revenues rather than its revenues within that jurisdiction is extortion, plain and simple. The government loses any notion of credibility and legitimacy when enacting and enforcing such laws. Can you imagine if you were facing lawsuits from 3 countries and each wanted 35% penalty of your global revenues? It would literally be more profitable to simply never pay the fines and cease operations in those countries.

Fines and penalties for violations of local laws can make sense if they are just. But to base fines and penalties on a company's business in jurisdictions outside your own makes no sense.

In this case there is literally a local subsidiary of Apple in India that is its own legal entity that Apple was required to establish in order to do business there -- it is called Apple India Private Limited (CIN: U30007KA1996PTC019630). Any lawsuit should be against that entity and any penalties calculated should be derived from revenues of that entity.
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sw1tcher Avatar
4 days ago at 09:08 am

And if they pull out, what happens to Apple’s ability to manufacture iPhones now that Apple shifted 25% of their production there
If Apple listened to all the people over the years who've said "Apple should just pull out of ______," Apple would have left the EU, China, India, Japan, etc., cutting their total addressable market by over 50%
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
4 days ago at 08:43 am
India is going to fine Apple $38B? Apple should pull out of India and rethink its plans.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
2 days ago at 09:59 am

Maybe governments wouldn’t be able to copy paste antitrust lawsuits if Apple didn’t violate antitrust everywhere
There are no antitrust lawsuits as Apple hasn’t violated antitrust statues anywhere.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
maxoakland Avatar
2 days ago at 09:40 am
Maybe governments wouldn’t be able to copy paste antitrust lawsuits if Apple didn’t violate antitrust everywhere
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 days ago at 10:25 am
I mean, yeah, that’s kinda what happens when you lose something like this. Everyone else with a claim lines up to file their version.

That’s why Apple fights back so aggressively. They know the App Store monopoly getting wobbly in one country could have a cascading effect.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)