Attendees at events during Poland’s EU presidency are in for a fruity treat—local apples will take centre stage as the official symbol of this six-month term. View on euronews
Apple has stopped selling the iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, and third-generation iPhone SE in all E.U. member states.
Starting today, the iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, and third-generation iPhone SE have been fully removed from Apple's online store in most
Apple devices with Lightning ports that were still being sold by the company, like the iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, and iPhone SE, were fully removed from the Apple Store on Friday, as reported by MacRumors.
If you want to buy an iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus or iPhone SE, it’s just been removed from sale in dozens of countries.
Apple has pulled the iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, and iPhone SE from sale in the European Union following guidelines that say all devices must charge via USB-C.
The ECJ ordered Apple to pay 13 billion euros in back taxes. According to an analysis, the US company nevertheless emerged victorious from the case.
Apple has clarified that it has never sold the data collected by its Siri voice assistant or used it to create marketing profiles, just days after settling a case in which it faced such accusations. In a first,
Apple is pulling the iPhone SE 3, the iPhone 14, and the iPhone 14 Plus from sale across the European Union (EU) to comply with the market's USB-C charging mandate.
Apple has pulled the iPhone 14 and the third-gen iPhone SE from its online Apple Store in a number of EU countries, all to abide by inbound charger regulations.
Apple has stopped selling the iPhone 14 and iPhone SE in most EU countries due to rules requiring USB-C charging.
From December 28th, a large percentage of the gadgets bought inside the EU are required to charge via USB-C. The goal for Directive 2022/2380, known colloquially as the common charging solution, is to reduce e-waste and solve market fragmentation. You may recall Apple and the EU butting heads over this a few years ago.