Spotify Complains Against Apple After Updated App Gets Rejected
Spotify Complains Against Apple After Updated App Gets Rejected
The letter said Apple's rejection of the revised app raised 'serious concerns' under competition law in the United States and Europe and the move was causing 'grave harm to Spotify and its customers.'

Stockholm: Spotify confirmed on Friday that it has complained to Apple Inc after the US technology company rejected an updated app for the Swedish music streaming service on iPhones.

The companies have gone head to head in the battle for music streaming customers since Apple Music was launched in more than 100 countries last year, and Spotify said the rejection of its revised app for iPhones was causing it "grave harm."

The complaint was in the form of a letter sent by Spotify's lawyer to Apple this week, technology website Recode reported.

The letter said Apple's rejection of the revised app raised "serious concerns" under competition law in the United States and Europe and the move was causing "grave harm to Spotify and its customers," Recode first reported on Thursday.

"It continues a troubling pattern of behavior by Apple to exclude and diminish the competitiveness of Spotify on iOS and as a rival to Apple Music," Recode quoted Spotify general counsel Horacio Gutierrez as saying in the letter.

"We cannot stand by as Apple uses the App Store approval process as a weapon to harm competitors," Gutierrez said.

A Spotify spokeswoman confirmed the accuracy of the report.

Apple did not respond to requests for comment.

Launched a decade ago, Spotify is the world's biggest paid music streaming service with about 30 million paying users in 59 markets while Apple Music has some 13 million.

According to Recode, privately owned Spotify said Apple turned down the app under "business model rules," and demanded the Swedish service use Apple's billing system if it wanted to "use the app to acquire new customers and sell subscriptions."

Music streaming is a crowded business. Alphabet Inc's Google Music and YouTube units also compete with Spotify and Apple Music to attract users prepared to pay for music, as does Pandora Media Inc and rapper Jay Z's Tidal.

Amazon.com Inc is also preparing a standalone streaming service, sources have told Reuters.

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