The UK’s Competition Appeal Tribunal has given the green light to a landmark collective lawsuit against Apple. The case, valued at approximately £3 billion (around $4 billion), accuses the tech giant of abusing its dominant market position with its iCloud storage service. Consumer advocacy group Which? filed the claim in November 2024 and will represent nearly 40 million UK iCloud users who used the service between November 2018 and June 2026. The tribunal approved the collective proceedings order earlier in June 2026, rejecting Apple’s attempts to block parts of the case. A full trial is now expected in 2028. The Allegations: Trapping Users and Stifling Competition Which? argues that Apple has unfairly “trapped” iPhone and other device users into its iCloud ecosystem. According to the claim, Apple achieved this through: • Technical restrictions on how certain files can be stored. • Deep integration (tying) of iCloud with iOS devices. • In-app prompts and system designs that steer users toward its own paid storage tiers. These practices, the group says, have limited competition from rival cloud providers, weakened consumer choice, and driven up prices for storage. Anabel Hoult, Chief Executive of Which?, stated: “Which? wants to make clear that no company, no matter how powerful, can get away with abusing its position.” The organization estimates that successful claimants could receive payouts of up to £77 per person. Apple’s Position Apple has previously rejected the allegations, emphasizing that customers are not required to use iCloud and that many opt for third-party alternatives. The company has indicated it will vigorously defend its practices. It did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment on the tribunal’s latest decision. Broader Context This lawsuit is part of a growing wave of scrutiny on Apple’s ecosystem practices in the UK and Europe. It follows other high-profile cases involving the App Store and highlights ongoing debates about “walled gardens” in consumer technology. If successful, the case could force changes in how Apple handles cloud storage on its devices and set a precedent for similar actions elsewhere.UK consumers affected by the case (those who used iCloud on Apple devices in the UK during the relevant period) can likely find more details and opt-in/opt-out information via Which?’s dedicated claim site. MacDailyNews Take: Apple’s approach has always been about delivering the best possible experience for its users: effortless syncing, end-to-end encryption by default, optimized performance across devices, and rock-solid privacy protections that competitors often treat as afterthoughts. Forcing Apple to hand over the same low-level access to third-party cloud services risks compromising exactly what customers love and pay a premium for — security, reliability, and simplicity. This isn’t “anticompetitive” behavior; it’s Apple competing on the merits. The company invests billions in its infrastructure, develops proprietary technologies, and maintains strict standards to protect users from very real threats. Lowering those walls to satisfy regulators and rival cloud providers doesn’t create fair competition — it invites mediocrity and security risks into a platform renowned for excellence. Why should Apple be compelled to undermine its own product to prop up alternatives that users have already voted against with their wallets? Seems like beleaguered Britain, which has been on an “Annual Prime Minister Plan” for the last decade, would rather engineer artificial parity through lawsuits and the threat of heavy-handed regulation than let the market reward innovation. Nothing says “vibrant economy” like a country that hasn’t produced a major global tech innovator in decades deciding to punish the one American company that actually does. The real question Britain’s Competition Appeal Tribunal should ask: If third-party clouds are so great, why aren’t more users flocking to them voluntarily? Forcing integration won’t change the answer — it will only make great products worse – and very likely insecure – for everyone. Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon. The post UK tribunal greenlights $4 billion) class action lawsuit against Apple over iCloud ‘Lock-In’ appeared first on MacDailyNews. Invite your friends and earn rewards
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Tuesday, June 23, 2026
UK tribunal greenlights $4 billion) class action lawsuit against Apple over iCloud ‘Lock-In’
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UK tribunal greenlights $4 billion) class action lawsuit against Apple over iCloud ‘Lock-In’
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