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Two human rights organizations want the European Union to force Apple to remove all barriers to making third-party app stores — but it’s an unnecessary demand that ignores that the iPhone remains the greatest freedom of speech and expression hardware ever made.

Blue flags with yellow stars and a white airport emblem wave on metal poles, with a modern glass building in the background.
An EU flag with the App Store logo

Users in the European Union are now able to buy iPhone apps from third-party alternatives to the App Store. Apple has consistently objected to opening up the iPhone, and tries to limit privacy issues — but now two groups are complaining that it is overstepping the mark.

The two are Article 19 — a UK-based human rights organization which works worldwide — and Berlin-based Gesellschaft fr Freiheitsrechte (GFF), which translates as Society for Freedom Rights. Their joint argument is that Apple’s conditions for developing a third-party app store are intentionally designed to prevent companies doing it.

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