• My Feed
  • Home
  • What's Important
  • Media & Entertainment
Search

Stay Curious. Stay Wanture.

© 2026 Wanture. All rights reserved.

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
Tech/Business
Apple’s April 9 Telega App Removal Sparks Antitrust Probe

23 April 2026

—

News

Rachel Stein

Apple removed the unofficial Telega client from the App Store on April 9, 2026, prompting Russian developer JSC "Telega" to file an antitrust complaint alleging monopoly abuse. The case now sits before Russia's Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS), which stated on April 17, 2026, that the removal may violate competition law, a ruling that could reverberate across how major platforms police third‑party software in the United States and beyond.

Platform gatekeeping becomes monopoly abuse when a company wields its infrastructure to silence alternatives. Here, Apple didn't just remove an app; it effectively erased a developer's ability to distribute code that alters how a core messaging service operates. The question isn't whether Apple has that technical power, it does. The question is whether exercising it crosses the line from curation into anti‑competitive control.

Telega swaps Telegram server addresses, deploys its own RSA key, and routes user data through private servers. That architecture gives the developer extraordinary access: messages pass through infrastructure Apple can't audit, creating risks the company says justify removal. On April 17, 2026, iOS began displaying warnings; users who ignored them found the app forcibly deleted.

Telega's creators dispute Apple's rationale. They claim the company blocked updates without technical justification, labeled the app malicious, and deleted their developer account, all without meaningful recourse. Independent analysis surfaced a second concern: a hidden block that disables Telegram's secret chats, and reports that devices running Telega can become inoperable after iOS updates. Apple has not publicly addressed those findings.

FAS has opened a formal investigation and pledged remedial measures if violations are confirmed. The agency's press service noted that similar complaints have previously signaled breaches of Russia's Competition Protection Law. The core allegation: Apple used its App Store monopoly to eliminate a competitor without demonstrating harm beyond vague "security" claims.

This isn't the first time Apple has faced antitrust scrutiny over App Store policies. In the United States, the company settled a class‑action lawsuit in 2021 permitting developers to communicate directly with users about alternative payment methods. European regulators fined Apple €1.8 billion in March 2024 for restricting music‑streaming rivals. Each case turns on the same question: whether vertical integration, owning the platform and deciding what runs on it, becomes anti‑competitive when alternatives are foreclosed.

Apple's App Store guidelines exist to protect users, but guidelines written, interpreted, and enforced by a single gatekeeper create a structural conflict of interest. When that gatekeeper also competes in adjacent markets, messaging, payments, media, the conflict sharpens.

Telega's team plans to sue journalists and bloggers for defamation and is preparing further legal action against Apple while the antitrust probe proceeds. The developer argues that Apple's "malicious" label destroyed its reputation without evidence, and that media reports about devices becoming "bricks" are false. If FAS rules in Telega's favor, the remedy could range from reinstatement to structural changes in how Apple manages third‑party clients.

The outcome will test whether competition law can constrain platform power in practice. A ruling for Telega would signal that gatekeepers must justify removals with transparent, verifiable criteria, not unilateral declarations. A ruling for Apple would affirm broad discretion to police software that alters core services, even when competitive harm is alleged.

For developers, users, and regulators in the United States, the stakes are familiar. The tools that enable innovation, APIs, app stores, operating systems, are controlled by a small number of companies. When those companies decide which innovations survive, the line between curation and censorship blurs. Telega's complaint asks where that line should be drawn, and who gets to hold the pen.

Mobile Bottom Test Banner

What is this about?

  • News/
  • Rachel Stein/
  • Tech/
  • Business/
  • Apple competition/
  • Phone bricking/
  • App Store Antitrust/
  • Platform gatekeeping

Feed

    Xbox Drops Microsoft Gaming Label, 2022 Rebrand Reversed

    Microsoft’s Xbox division announced in 2026 that it will retire the “Microsoft Gaming” brand introduced in 2022 and revert to the classic Xbox name. The shift signals a strategic focus on daily active users across PC, mobile, and emerging markets, backed by the upcoming Project Helix and an expanded push into China.

    Xbox Drops Microsoft Gaming Label, 2022 Rebrand Reversed
    Jordan McAllisterabout 3 hours ago

    Honor's six‑fan Win H9 cuts temps by 12.5%

    Honor unveiled the Win H9 gaming laptop in China on April 22, noting a six‑fan system that cuts temperatures 12.5% versus the older two‑fan design. The flagship ships with an RTX 5070 Ti, Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX, 32 GB RAM, 1 TB SSD, and a 300‑Hz 16:10 DCI‑P3 display. Prices begin at 18,000 yuan for the top model and 11,500 yuan for the base, with no confirmed launch outside China.

    Honor's six‑fan Win H9 cuts temps by 12.5%
    Carter Brooksabout 3 hours ago

    Open AI Models Prove Value in Samsung‑Noôdome Pilot

    At Samsung’s Innovation Campus, mathematician Arutyun Avetisyan and AI researcher Svetlana Yun presented Noôdome‑backed data showing lightweight, open‑source AI models can trim development sprints by three days and cut defect rates by about 15%. They warned that oversight and talent development are essential to avoid security and bias risks while scaling AI.

    Adrian Vegaabout 3 hours ago

    DeepSeek launches V4‑Pro, V4‑Flash 1 million‑token window

    DeepSeek unveiled V4‑Pro and V4‑Flash on April 24 with a 1 million‑token context window and open‑weight model weights. V4‑Pro runs 1.6 trillion parameters (49 billion active); V4‑Flash has 284 billion total (13 billion active). API fees are $1.74 per million input and $3.48 per million output for Pro, and $0.14 input/$0.28 output for Flash. Models are on Hugging Face for quick integration.

    DeepSeek launches V4‑Pro, V4‑Flash 1 million‑token window
    Jasmine Wuabout 5 hours ago

    UAE aims to automate half of its services by 2028

    The UAE government has launched a two‑year directive that will see autonomous AI agents handle requests, recommendations, and real‑time decisions across more than 30 ministries. Oversight rests with Vice President Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and a task force led by Minister Mohammad Al Gergawi, with pilots slated for health and transportation, and rollout by late 2027.

    Rachel Steinabout 20 hours ago
    Game Pass Ultimate May Get Full‑Time Discord Nitro

    Game Pass Ultimate May Get Full‑Time Discord Nitro

    Xbox and Discord hint at extended Nitro perks for subscribers

    Carter Brooks1 day ago
    OpenAI launches always‑on AI agents for Workspace

    OpenAI launches always‑on AI agents for Workspace

    Agents replace Custom GPTs, running continuously to automate business workflows

    Jasmine Wu1 day ago
    Meta Starts Recording U.S. Staff Screens to Train AI

    Meta Starts Recording U.S. Staff Screens to Train AI

    Meta logs employee screenshots as it plans a 10% staff cut

    Rachel Stein1 day ago
    Razer launches Atlas Pro glass pad at 1.9 mm thickness

    Razer launches Atlas Pro glass pad at 1.9 mm thickness

    It claims the title of the world’s thinnest glass mouse pad

    Carter Brooks1 day ago
    Loading...
Tech/Business

Apple’s April 9 Telega App Removal Sparks Antitrust Probe

23 April 2026

—

News

Rachel Stein

Apple removed the unofficial Telega client from the App Store on April 9, 2026, prompting Russian developer JSC "Telega" to file an antitrust complaint alleging monopoly abuse. The case now sits before Russia's Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS), which stated on April 17, 2026, that the removal may violate competition law, a ruling that could reverberate across how major platforms police third‑party software in the United States and beyond.

Platform gatekeeping becomes monopoly abuse when a company wields its infrastructure to silence alternatives. Here, Apple didn't just remove an app; it effectively erased a developer's ability to distribute code that alters how a core messaging service operates. The question isn't whether Apple has that technical power, it does. The question is whether exercising it crosses the line from curation into anti‑competitive control.

Telega swaps Telegram server addresses, deploys its own RSA key, and routes user data through private servers. That architecture gives the developer extraordinary access: messages pass through infrastructure Apple can't audit, creating risks the company says justify removal. On April 17, 2026, iOS began displaying warnings; users who ignored them found the app forcibly deleted.

Telega's creators dispute Apple's rationale. They claim the company blocked updates without technical justification, labeled the app malicious, and deleted their developer account, all without meaningful recourse. Independent analysis surfaced a second concern: a hidden block that disables Telegram's secret chats, and reports that devices running Telega can become inoperable after iOS updates. Apple has not publicly addressed those findings.

FAS has opened a formal investigation and pledged remedial measures if violations are confirmed. The agency's press service noted that similar complaints have previously signaled breaches of Russia's Competition Protection Law. The core allegation: Apple used its App Store monopoly to eliminate a competitor without demonstrating harm beyond vague "security" claims.

This isn't the first time Apple has faced antitrust scrutiny over App Store policies. In the United States, the company settled a class‑action lawsuit in 2021 permitting developers to communicate directly with users about alternative payment methods. European regulators fined Apple €1.8 billion in March 2024 for restricting music‑streaming rivals. Each case turns on the same question: whether vertical integration, owning the platform and deciding what runs on it, becomes anti‑competitive when alternatives are foreclosed.

Apple's App Store guidelines exist to protect users, but guidelines written, interpreted, and enforced by a single gatekeeper create a structural conflict of interest. When that gatekeeper also competes in adjacent markets, messaging, payments, media, the conflict sharpens.

Telega's team plans to sue journalists and bloggers for defamation and is preparing further legal action against Apple while the antitrust probe proceeds. The developer argues that Apple's "malicious" label destroyed its reputation without evidence, and that media reports about devices becoming "bricks" are false. If FAS rules in Telega's favor, the remedy could range from reinstatement to structural changes in how Apple manages third‑party clients.

The outcome will test whether competition law can constrain platform power in practice. A ruling for Telega would signal that gatekeepers must justify removals with transparent, verifiable criteria, not unilateral declarations. A ruling for Apple would affirm broad discretion to police software that alters core services, even when competitive harm is alleged.

For developers, users, and regulators in the United States, the stakes are familiar. The tools that enable innovation, APIs, app stores, operating systems, are controlled by a small number of companies. When those companies decide which innovations survive, the line between curation and censorship blurs. Telega's complaint asks where that line should be drawn, and who gets to hold the pen.

What is this about?

  • News/
  • Rachel Stein/
  • Tech/
  • Business/
  • Apple competition/
  • Phone bricking/
  • App Store Antitrust/
  • Platform gatekeeping

Feed

    Xbox Drops Microsoft Gaming Label, 2022 Rebrand Reversed

    Microsoft’s Xbox division announced in 2026 that it will retire the “Microsoft Gaming” brand introduced in 2022 and revert to the classic Xbox name. The shift signals a strategic focus on daily active users across PC, mobile, and emerging markets, backed by the upcoming Project Helix and an expanded push into China.

    Xbox Drops Microsoft Gaming Label, 2022 Rebrand Reversed
    Jordan McAllisterabout 3 hours ago

    Honor's six‑fan Win H9 cuts temps by 12.5%

    Honor unveiled the Win H9 gaming laptop in China on April 22, noting a six‑fan system that cuts temperatures 12.5% versus the older two‑fan design. The flagship ships with an RTX 5070 Ti, Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX, 32 GB RAM, 1 TB SSD, and a 300‑Hz 16:10 DCI‑P3 display. Prices begin at 18,000 yuan for the top model and 11,500 yuan for the base, with no confirmed launch outside China.

    Honor's six‑fan Win H9 cuts temps by 12.5%
    Carter Brooksabout 3 hours ago

    Open AI Models Prove Value in Samsung‑Noôdome Pilot

    At Samsung’s Innovation Campus, mathematician Arutyun Avetisyan and AI researcher Svetlana Yun presented Noôdome‑backed data showing lightweight, open‑source AI models can trim development sprints by three days and cut defect rates by about 15%. They warned that oversight and talent development are essential to avoid security and bias risks while scaling AI.

    Adrian Vegaabout 3 hours ago

    DeepSeek launches V4‑Pro, V4‑Flash 1 million‑token window

    DeepSeek unveiled V4‑Pro and V4‑Flash on April 24 with a 1 million‑token context window and open‑weight model weights. V4‑Pro runs 1.6 trillion parameters (49 billion active); V4‑Flash has 284 billion total (13 billion active). API fees are $1.74 per million input and $3.48 per million output for Pro, and $0.14 input/$0.28 output for Flash. Models are on Hugging Face for quick integration.

    DeepSeek launches V4‑Pro, V4‑Flash 1 million‑token window
    Jasmine Wuabout 5 hours ago

    UAE aims to automate half of its services by 2028

    The UAE government has launched a two‑year directive that will see autonomous AI agents handle requests, recommendations, and real‑time decisions across more than 30 ministries. Oversight rests with Vice President Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and a task force led by Minister Mohammad Al Gergawi, with pilots slated for health and transportation, and rollout by late 2027.

    Rachel Steinabout 20 hours ago
    Game Pass Ultimate May Get Full‑Time Discord Nitro

    Game Pass Ultimate May Get Full‑Time Discord Nitro

    Xbox and Discord hint at extended Nitro perks for subscribers

    Carter Brooks1 day ago
    OpenAI launches always‑on AI agents for Workspace

    OpenAI launches always‑on AI agents for Workspace

    Agents replace Custom GPTs, running continuously to automate business workflows

    Jasmine Wu1 day ago
    Meta Starts Recording U.S. Staff Screens to Train AI

    Meta Starts Recording U.S. Staff Screens to Train AI

    Meta logs employee screenshots as it plans a 10% staff cut

    Rachel Stein1 day ago
    Razer launches Atlas Pro glass pad at 1.9 mm thickness

    Razer launches Atlas Pro glass pad at 1.9 mm thickness

    It claims the title of the world’s thinnest glass mouse pad

    Carter Brooks1 day ago
    Loading...