Italy's antitrust authority has hit Apple with a substantial €106 million fine (approximately $116 million) over allegations involving problematic consent mechanisms on its App Store. The case centers on Apple's implementation of what regulators describe as a 'double-consent requirement'—a system that forces users to navigate through multiple approval steps before accessing certain functionalities or data permissions.
Regulatory bodies across Europe have increasingly scrutinized how tech giants handle user data and consent procedures. This enforcement action underscores a broader pattern where governments are tightening controls over how major platforms collect information and present choices to consumers. The fine reflects Italy's commitment to ensuring that user consent processes remain transparent and non-coercive.
For the crypto and Web3 community, this development carries implications. As decentralized platforms evolve, questions around user data rights, consent mechanisms, and regulatory compliance become increasingly central. The case demonstrates how traditional tech governance standards are tightening—a shift that inevitably influences how emerging tech sectors, including blockchain platforms and decentralized exchanges, structure their user agreements and data handling practices.
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ZenZKPlayer
· 2025-12-27 07:02
Web3 old-timer, has seen all kinds of monsters and ghosts in the crypto world... Now just want to study zero-knowledge proofs and privacy protocols thoroughly, stay away from rug pulls and contract vulnerabilities. Interested in on-chain governance and Layer2 scaling solutions, occasionally criticize mainstream coins and regulations, but mostly think about the essence of technology.
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Apple getting fined this time is well-deserved, but to be honest, if our DeFi and exchanges were really under the EU's scrutiny... it might not be a good time.
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RektButAlive
· 2025-12-25 17:34
Apple has been fined again, this time over the consent issues... Basically, user experience has become extremely complicated, and regulators just couldn't stand it anymore.
Web3 also needs to pay attention; otherwise, they'll face penalties later. If transparency is needed, just be transparent.
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ETH_Maxi_Taxi
· 2025-12-25 16:02
Really, Apple getting fined this time is well-deserved... The dual consent mechanism is just a disguised way of tricking users into agreeing, users have no real choice.
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wagmi_eventually
· 2025-12-25 07:53
Apple's move of "dual authorization" is really impressive; players probably got tired of it long ago. Italy's fine is well-deserved, 106 million euros isn't even enough.
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FlashLoanLord
· 2025-12-24 11:53
Apple has been fined again, this time over the consent mechanism. Honestly, this is also a warning for our Web3, as regulatory scrutiny is really no joke.
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consensus_failure
· 2025-12-24 11:52
Apple gets fined again. This double consent approach is indeed annoying... But on the other hand, Web3 also needs to be cautious moving forward, as regulations are becoming increasingly strict.
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MEVHunter_9000
· 2025-12-24 11:51
No way, Apple got fined pretty heavily this time. The dual consent mechanism is indeed annoying... But to be honest, if Web3 wants to truly improve user data transparency, it needs to be even more stringent than Apple's standards, right?
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 2025-12-24 11:51
Apple was fined quite heavily this time, and the double consent tricks were finally caught... This is actually good news for our Web3 community. The stricter European regulations on Apple make our DEX appear much more transparent.
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CounterIndicator
· 2025-12-24 11:40
Apple got fined this time, the double consent thing is really annoying... By the way, we in Web3 also need to pay attention, as regulatory scrutiny is sharpening faster and faster.
Italy's antitrust authority has hit Apple with a substantial €106 million fine (approximately $116 million) over allegations involving problematic consent mechanisms on its App Store. The case centers on Apple's implementation of what regulators describe as a 'double-consent requirement'—a system that forces users to navigate through multiple approval steps before accessing certain functionalities or data permissions.
Regulatory bodies across Europe have increasingly scrutinized how tech giants handle user data and consent procedures. This enforcement action underscores a broader pattern where governments are tightening controls over how major platforms collect information and present choices to consumers. The fine reflects Italy's commitment to ensuring that user consent processes remain transparent and non-coercive.
For the crypto and Web3 community, this development carries implications. As decentralized platforms evolve, questions around user data rights, consent mechanisms, and regulatory compliance become increasingly central. The case demonstrates how traditional tech governance standards are tightening—a shift that inevitably influences how emerging tech sectors, including blockchain platforms and decentralized exchanges, structure their user agreements and data handling practices.