
access to copy the Corresponding Source from a network server at no charge provided that you also convey the machine-readable Corresponding Source under the terms of this License, in one of these ways: You may convey a covered work in object code form. The GPL only requires that you provide access to source code. At minimum, the active project means Google would have a considerable head-start on developing a Blink-based browser for iOS if one is able to be distributed in the future.I disagree with the quoted statement. The European Union's Digital Markets Act is expected to compel Apple to allow third-party app stores and lift its browser engine restrictions as soon as next year. Similar recommendations have been made by antitrust authorities in the United Kingdom, Australia, and Japan.



This means that while browsers like Chrome and Microsoft Edge are built with Chromium on macOS and Windows, their iOS counterparts are forced to use Apple's WebKit, making them behave similarly to Safari.īased on the visible code commits, the app purportedly looks like the start of an alternate browser build and is still missing some key features at this early stage.

Yet if Google attempted to release it on the App Store, it would not pass Apple's App Review process.Īpple's App Store rules dictate that browser apps on iOS and iPadOS must use its own WebKit browser engine. The experimental browser, which is being actively pursued by developers, uses Google's Blink engine. Google's Chromium developers are working on an experimental web browser for iOS that would break Apple's browser engine restrictions, The Register reports.
