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Japan moves closer to requiring third-party app stores

By William Gallagher

The Japanese Fair Trade Commission is planning a raft of proposals that would emulate Europe's App Store regulations regarding Big Tech firms such as Apple and Google.

An Apple Store in Japan

It may now be consulting with the public, but Japan's Fair Trade Commission (FTC) expects to begin enforcing its Big Tech regulations from December 18, 2025. The consultation comes after the plans were passed by Japan's House of Representatives and House of Councillors in 2024.

The country's FTC has issued what calls draft subordinate legislations. They are all part of Japan's Mobile Software Competition Act, and a shows that the new law says Apple and Google must:

The provision about not favoring their own apps and services extends to the "unjust use of acquired data." Apple and Google must not benefit from user data that they gather that is not then made available to third-party developers.

Throughout the new consultation document, the FTC recognizes that there can be security and privacy issues that affect how -- or if -- data can be shared. It also repeatedly acknowledges the difficulty of proving compliance.

Consequently, the new documentation also requires Apple and Google to create systems for disclosing regulatory details. And then to disclose the details of those systems to the FTC.

In theory, the proposed guidelines for Big Tech companies could be extended to cover many such firms. But for now Japan's FTC is singling out three of what it calls Specified Software Operators

That second one, iTunes KK, is a Japanese subsidiary of Apple, based in Tokyo. It's responsible for running the Japanese versions of the App Store and other Apple media.

Japan's FTC requires interested members of the public to submit opinions -- solely in Japanese -- by the end of June 13. A finalized set of guidelines is expected to be issued before the end of July.

Apple has not commented since the release of the FTC's consultation document. However, during the FTC's investigations, Apple did defend its App Store rules, insisting that they were fair and transparent.