Right now Apple is facing quite a lot of regulation in various places to open up their platform: open up app loading, open up repairs, etc. It’s hard not to imagine this being yet another salvo in forcing Apple to open up their messaging platform (and it aligns with recent regulatory efforts).
Except, unlike app stores and repairs, the standard being pushed here, RCS, is not a good solution by comparison. It’s locked to carriers, who have different and inconsistent implementations, rather than being tied to an identity like iMessage.
It’ll be a shame if Apple is forced to adopt an inferior standard here…
Apple will probably be forced to open up their iMessage implementation once the Digital Markets Act will be adopted, forcing large messenger companies to make their messaging services interoperable.
If they're smart, they work together with Google and other large messenger providers to form some sort of secure standard. If they keep being stubborn, they'll be forced to either stop selling iMessage in Europe or accept consequences to their technology much worse than cooperation. I'm no fan of breaking E2EE for interoperation, but since none of the big market players seem interested in working together, I think this will be unavoidable. It's a shame, really, that it had to come to regulation to get the market to work in the users' favour.
This probably won't matter to users outside the EU but big changes are coming over here.
Except, unlike app stores and repairs, the standard being pushed here, RCS, is not a good solution by comparison. It’s locked to carriers, who have different and inconsistent implementations, rather than being tied to an identity like iMessage.
It’ll be a shame if Apple is forced to adopt an inferior standard here…