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Italy Launches Cloud Interoperability Probe Into Apple

Martin HollowayPublished 21h ago5 min readBased on 7 sources
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Italy Launches Cloud Interoperability Probe Into Apple

Italy's competition authority, the AGCM, opened an investigation into Apple on 16 June 2026 over the company's compliance with interoperability obligations under the Digital Markets Act, according to Reuters. The probe centres on iCloud and whether Apple is meeting the DMA's requirement that so-called gatekeepers — large platforms with significant market power — allow third-party services to work with their own platforms on fair terms.

This is not the AGCM's first contact with the matter. The authority held a final hearing in December 2025, with Apple entities represented — a procedural step that preceded the formal opening now confirmed.

The interoperability question around iCloud has been live at the European level for some time. A European Commission market investigation document published in April 2024 recorded findings from Open Web Advocacy that iCloud users face tangible difficulties accessing competing services. Under DMA Article 6, designated gatekeepers must allow third-party providers real-time access to interoperate with their services — a standard Apple's critics argue iCloud's current architecture does not meet.

Apple's Expanding DMA Exposure

The Italian probe lands inside a broader and accelerating pattern of DMA enforcement activity directed at Apple across Europe.

In March 2025, the European Commission adopted two decisions specifying concrete measures Apple must implement — the Commission exercising its power to make compliance obligations explicit rather than leaving Apple to self-interpret. A month later, in April 2025, the Commission closed a separate investigation into Apple's user choice obligations, citing constructive dialogue. This suggests that where Apple engages with regulators, they will credit that engagement, though engagement has not been uniform across all obligation areas.

The financial stakes were established earlier. In March 2024, the Commission fined Apple over €1.8 billion for App Store rules that blocked music streaming providers from steering users to cheaper offers outside the App Store — the first major DMA-related penalty against the company. That fine set a visible cost baseline for non-compliance.

Not every regulatory front has moved against Apple, however. In February 2026, the Commission concluded that Apple Ads and Apple Maps do not meet the gatekeeper threshold under the DMA — a decision that narrowed the scope of Apple's obligations in those areas. Regulators are not pursuing Apple uniformly across every surface; the legal picture is decided service by service.

The AGCM's move is nonetheless significant in structural terms. National competition authorities in EU member states can act in parallel with the Commission under the DMA framework, and an Italian cloud-services probe now adds a second jurisdictional thread to the interoperability question. How the AGCM and the Commission coordinate that workload will matter for how quickly Apple faces binding obligations in this specific area.

The interoperability obligation is arguably the DMA provision with the deepest technical consequences. Steering users toward alternative browser engines or payment options is a user interface and policy problem; genuine cloud interoperability requires changes to how APIs function, how users authenticate, how data moves between services, and potentially the underlying infrastructure that ties the Apple device ecosystem together. If regulators press for meaningful compliance, the remedies could be technically complex in ways that a fine or a consent screen change is not.

Apple has not, based on sources available at the time of writing, made a public statement on the AGCM probe. The investigation is at an early stage; formal findings and any potential remedies are likely to be months away at minimum.