
Why Proton says Apple is a "tool of dictatorships" in new lawsuit
Proton
has filed a bombshell federal lawsuit accusing Apple of becoming a "tool of dictatorships" through its iron grip on iPhone app distribution, claiming the tech giant systematically removes apps to appease authoritarian regimes worldwide.
The Swiss firm's 73-page complaint, filed in California federal court June 30, reveals how Apple's
App Store monopoly
enables global censorship. According to the lawsuit, 66 of the world's 100 most popular apps are banned from Chinese iPhones, while all 240 tested VPN apps, critical tools for bypassing government censorship, are blocked from Chinese users.
Proton claims Apple threatened to remove its own VPN app unless the company stopped advertising its ability to "unblock censored websites," forcing the privacy advocate to self-censor or lose access to millions of iOS users.
The lawsuit is the latest challenge to Apple's tight control over the iPhone ecosystem
The filing details Apple's pattern of removing apps at dictators' demands, including the 2019 removal of HKmap.Live during Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests and dozens of VPN apps from Russia's App Store last year, precisely when Russian citizens needed these tools most to access independent media.
"Apple's monopoly over iOS app distribution means it can enforce this perverse policy on all app developers, forcing them to also be complicit," Proton argues in court documents. The company serves over 100 million users across 180 countries with
privacy-focused alternatives to Apple
's own services.
Beyond censorship, Proton alleges Apple's 30% "arbitrary tax" on app payments props up "surveillance capitalism" by penalizing privacy-first subscription services while giving free passes to data-harvesting companies like Meta and Google that don't process App Store payments.
The class-action lawsuit seeks to break Apple's stranglehold on iPhone app distribution and payment processing, demanding court orders allowing competing app stores on iOS. Proton pledged to donate any settlement money to democracy and human rights organizations.
Apple has not responded to the allegations targeting its role in global digital authoritarianism.
AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
28 minutes ago
- Time of India
How OpenAI CEO Sam Altman went from calling Mark Zuckerberg's hiring "Exceptional" to slamming it as "Distasteful"
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is now blasting Meta 's aggressive talent poaching and $100 million signing bonuses, a dramatic reversal from 2016 when he praised Mark Zuckerberg 's hiring approach as "exceptional" during a YCombinator interview. The irony runs deep: Altman, who was then the President of YCombinator, told Zuckerberg that " Facebook has done exceptionally well is hiring" and called it "the thing you have to get good at" as a founder. Today, he's warning OpenAI employees that Meta is "acting in a way that feels somewhat distasteful" as the company raids his AI talent. In a fiery internal Slack message, Altman dismissed Meta's recruitment success, claiming they "didn't get their top people and had to go quite far down their list." He declared that "missionaries will beat mercenaries" while hinting at compensation adjustments across OpenAI's research organization. The battle intensified after Meta successfully recruited at least seven OpenAI researchers for its new superintelligence team, with packages reportedly reaching $300 million over four years. Altman revealed on his brother's podcast that Zuckerberg has been "making these giant offers to a lot of people on our team," including "$100 million signing bonuses, more than that compensation per year." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch vàng CFDs với sàn môi giới tin cậy IC Markets Tìm hiểu thêm Undo When Altman praised Zuckerberg's hiring philosophy Mark Zuckerberg : How to Build the Future Back in 2016, Zuckerberg had explained his talent-over-experience philosophy to Altman, saying he invested in "people who we think are just really talented, even if they haven't done that thing before." The Facebook CEO emphasized creating internal growth opportunities, noting that of the company's 12 product groups, all leaders except one "did not join the company running a product group or reporting to me." Zuckerberg credited this approach with keeping "the best people engaged" and attracting top talent who saw advancement opportunities. Altman was clearly impressed, positioning hiring as the critical founder skill. Mission over money: Altman's current defense strategy Now Altman questions Meta's innovation DNA entirely: "There's many things I respect about Meta as a company, but I don't think they're a company that's great at innovation." He argues his employees see OpenAI as having a "much better shot actually, delivering on superintelligence and also may eventually be the more valuable company." The OpenAI chief attacked Meta's compensation-first strategy, claiming "the degree to which they are focusing on that and not the work and not the mission, I don't think that's going to set up a great culture." He emphasized that OpenAI "actually care about building AGI in a good way," while "other companies care more about this as an instrumental goal."


Mint
30 minutes ago
- Mint
Multibagger Inox Wind: Motilal Oswal bets on renewable energy, sees multi-year growth potential; sets target at ₹210
Multibagger renewable energy stock has recieved a bullish note from domestic brokerage house Motilal Oswal Financial Services. The brokerage initiated coverage on the stock with a 'Buy' rating and set a target price of ₹ 210 per share, implying a potential upside of almost 19 percent from its previous close of ₹ 176.85. Motilal Oswal said, 'We initiate coverage on Inox Wind Limited (IWL) with a BUY rating and a target price of ₹ 210 per share.' The brokerage noted that Inox Wind is a leading vertically integrated player in India's wind energy sector, offering end-to-end solutions, including project conception, commissioning, and long-term operations and maintenance (O&M) services. As of FY25-end, Inox Wind had an impressive order book of 3.2 GW, providing strong revenue visibility for the next two years. Motilal Oswal pointed out that the company operates with an annual manufacturing capacity of 2.5 GW across four facilities and produces both 2 MW and 3 MW wind turbine generators. 'Inox Wind's business is further supported by its subsidiary Inox Green Energy Services (IGESL), which manages a 5.1 GW O&M portfolio,' the brokerage said. Another subsidiary, Inox Renewable Solutions (IRSL), is expanding into solar, hybrid EPC, and crane services, offering synergies to the core wind operations. Highlighting broader sector trends, Motilal Oswal noted that wind energy is expected to account for around 20 percent of India's renewable energy mix by 2030, up from current levels. In comparison, the wind share in the renewable energy mix is already 39 percent in the US, 33 percent in China, and 42 percent in the UK. 'Hybrid and firm-dispatchable renewable energy projects are gaining traction, and wind remains an integral component, despite theoretical enthusiasm for standalone solar-plus-storage solutions,' the brokerage added. On the policy front, Motilal Oswal flagged a key regulatory development: the draft amendment to the Revised List of Models and Manufacturers (RLMM) by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE). If finalised, the stricter local sourcing norms could narrow the cost advantage held by Chinese suppliers. 'The proposed RLMM changes could support domestic OEMs like SUEL and IWL by addressing the competitive pressure from Chinese imports,' Motilal Oswal noted. Looking ahead, the brokerage expects Inox Wind to deliver a 38 percent EBITDA CAGR over FY25–28, driven by an increase in wind turbine generator (WTG) execution—from 705 MW in FY25 to 1.8 GW in FY28—and a tripling of the O&M portfolio to 9.6 GW. O&M revenue, EBITDA, and adjusted PAT are forecast to grow at a CAGR of 27 percent, 54 percent, and 65 percent, respectively. The recent merger of Inox Wind with its holding company Inox Wind Energy, approved by the NCLT on June 10, 2025, is expected to streamline the corporate structure and reduce liabilities by ₹ 2,000 crore. Additionally, IGESL is in the process of demerging its power evacuation division into IRSL, which is estimated to save ₹ 48 crore annually in depreciation. Motilal Oswal has valued Inox Wind at 25x FY27 estimated earnings per share, arriving at a target price of ₹ 210. 'This is at a 29 percent discount to the valuation of Suzlon Energy, reflecting both opportunity and risk,' the brokerage said. Inox Wind has delivered impressive long-term returns. The renewable energy stock is up 23 percent over the past year. It saw a 10 percent decline in June after a strong three-month rally—rising 15.5 percent in May, 3.7 percent in April, and 8.5 percent in March. Previously, the stock had declined for five straight months from October 2024 to February 2025. In the long term, Inox Wind has turned into a multibagger, surging 1675 percent over the past five years from ₹ 9.96 in 2020. Over the past three years, it has rallied 794 percent. Disclaimer: The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.


Time of India
31 minutes ago
- Time of India
China's Changan plans European factory, executive says
Chinese automaker Changan plans a European factory to support its future sales on the continent and is already weighing up possible locations for the plant, an executive told Reuters on Wednesday. "We're committed to being in Europe, making in Europe for Europe," said Nic Thomas, Changan's European head of marketing, sales and service, during a test drive of the automaker's electric Deepal S07 SUV at an event outside London. "We're working on local manufacturing solutions here." Thomas said he could not discuss timing for a European assembly plant but said "we already believe we're going to hit the (sales) volume, so we're already in the planning stages." Changan said in March that it plans to enter 10 markets across Europe this year with electric vehicle models. Thomas, who also runs Changan's UK operations , said the automaker will start selling the Deepal S07 to British consumers this year, with deliveries starting in September. In 2024, Changan was the world's No. 16 automaker with sales of just over 2.2 million vehicles, according to car industry analyst Felipe Munoz. Thomas said Changan sold 600,000 cars outside China last year and this year aims to increase that 1 million vehicles. Changan joins a number of other Chinese automakers that have already launched sales in Europe, including BYD and Chery . The European Union has imposed tariffs on Chinese-made EVs, but both BYD and Chery have already announced plans for local car production. BYD is building an EV plant in Hungary and Chery will build cars in Spain with local joint venture partner Ebro. Earlier on Wednesday, Chinese automaker Geely said it was launching its Geely brand in Britain and its first vehicle to go on sale in the country will be its electric EX5 SUV.