In February, we heard leaker ShrimpApplePro predict that Apple has Made for iPhone (MFi) USB-C cables in mass production ahead of the iPhone 15 launch in the fall. However, part of that also included the expectation that non-certified cables “will be limited in data and charging speed.”
Then in March, reliable Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo corroborated that Apple will allow faster charging speeds with USB-C and iPhone 15 but not for non-Apple or non-certified cables.
The EU Commission has been paying attention to the Apple USB-C rumors and has made a move to try and get ahead of the possibility of limited USB-C cables happening.
Reported by Zeit Online via MacRumors, EU Industry Commissioner Thierry Breton wrote a warning to Apple in a letter seen by the German dpa news agency. Breton referenced recent media reports about Apple’s alleged plan and simply said it would be “inadmissible to restrict the interaction with chargers.”
The report also notes that the EU Commission reminded Apple in March that “Devices that do not meet the requirements for the single charger will not be approved on the EU market.”
The Brussels authority is reportedly aiming to publish a guide on the “uniform interpretation” of the EU directive for uniform chargers by Q3 2023.
