The DOJ Thinks Apple CarPlay is Bad for Consumers and the Industry

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

A significant percentage of new car buyers want Apple CarPlay in their next vehicle, but that popularity has the government on high alert. As part of its recent antitrust lawsuit against the tech giant, the U.S. Department of Justice listed CarPlay, saying that it stifled the development of technologies that could work with a phone while residing in the vehicle’s interface.


The lawsuit reads, “By applying the same playbook of restrictions to CarPlay, Apple further locks-in the power of the iPhone by preventing the development of other disintermediating technologies that interoperate with the phone but reside off device.” All of this comes as Apple looks to expand CarPlay’s influence over in-vehicle infotainment to include climate controls and other functions, which is part of the DOJ’s issue.


Automakers have a choice about how immersive they let Apple make the experience, so it’s not like the company is holding OEMs hostage to cover every screen inside a vehicle. Also, while many people have smartphones, car companies can’t assume that everyone does, so new vehicles still have to create usable, intuitive software to control vehicle functions.


The DOJ also took issue with Apple’s control over the Wallet app, saying that “The default status of Apple Wallet steers users to the Apple Wallet rather than allowing third parties to present digital car keys only in their own cross-platform app, increasing dependence on Apple and the iPhone whenever they use their car.” Companies like Rivian and Tesla don’t offer Apple tech, but General Motors recently stopped including smartphone mirroring in its new electric vehicles. The automaker’s tech almost immediately started having problems, leading to a stop-sale for the Chevy Blazer EV and financial compensation for some buyers.


[Image: Chinnapong via Shutterstock]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Lichtronamo Lichtronamo on Mar 25, 2024

    You know why Apple and Android are so popular? Because they work... Automakers would be better off contracting with them (or Google) to develop their interfaces because the in-house efforts never seem to work as well.

    • See 2 previous
    • Naf65767183 Naf65767183 on Apr 15, 2024

      @Lichtronamo: Android is by Google/Alphabet. ie, Android is to Google/Alphabet as CarPlay is to Apple.


  • Wolfwagen Wolfwagen on Mar 25, 2024

    The DOJ has become a joke.

    Targeting parents voicing Concerns at School Board meetings? Check.

    Arresting An Anti-Abortion protester (in full military gear) for pushing a pro-abortion advocate for lying hands on the AA protestor's child? Check.

    Ignoring information about a politician and his son in an influence-pedaling scam? Check. Ignoring Drug and Child trafficking? Check.

    Worried about Company that has a superior product that attracts buyers? Check.


    Thank God Merrick Garland did become a member of SCOTUS.

  • 28-Cars-Later So now H/K motors will last longer in between scheduled replacements. Wow, actual progress.
  • AZFelix I have always wondered if the poor ability of Tesla cars in detecting children was due to their using camera only systems. Optical geometry explains that a child half the height of an adult seems to have the same height as that same adult standing twice as far away from the viewer.
  • 28-Cars-Later Actually pretty appealing (apparently I'm doing this now). On a similar note, a friend of mine had a difficult situation with a tenant which led to eviction and apparently the tenant has abandoned a 2007 Jag S-Type with unknown miles in the garage so he called me for an opinion. Before checking I said $2-3 max, low and behold I'm just that good with the 3.0L clocking in at $2,3 on average (oddly the 4.2 V8 version only pulls $2,9ish) and S-Types after MY05 are supposedly decent.
  • DO I have owned a 2012 LR4 since day one and it has been the best vehicle I have ever had the pleasure of having in the garage. I know how easy it is to hate on Land Rover but this LR4 is comfortable, has a ton of storage room and is so versatile. With 110k miles, mine is now relegated to ‘other’ car use but is still the go to for off road adventures and snow runs. Nice to see one featured here - I think they are so underrated.
  • Tane94 I'd be curious to know whether 87 octane is no longer the most popular grade of gasoline by sales volume. My Costco often runs out of Premium grade and I suspect 93 octane might now be the most popular grade of gas. Paying 40-50 cents more per gallon 87 vs 93 octane because of turbo engines is the real story
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