Apple and Samsung put aside their war and signed a deal that will let people access iTunes on their smart TVs

Advertisement
Apple and Samsung put aside their war and signed a deal that will let people access iTunes on their smart TVs

Tim Cook Apple TV

Robert Galbraith/Reuters

Apple CEO Tim Cook.

Advertisement
  • Apple and Samsung put aside their protracted rivalry and signed a deal that will let people access iTunes on their smart Samsung TVs.
  • Samsung will add an app to its televisions that lets users browse and play their existing iTunes movies and television shows, as well as purchase or rent new content.
  • Apple is increasingly leaning on its services business for revenue amid slowing smartphone sales.

Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said Sunday that it will add an app to its smart televisions in the coming months to let owners watch content bought on Apple Inc's iTunes service, a possible first sign Apple is looking to distribute its forthcoming television service on devices made by others.

The deal is part of an ongoing strategy shift for Apple, which is facing weak hardware sales in China and a saturated global smartphone market where users are hanging on to their old iPhones longer than ever, hammering its biggest business.

Complimentary Tech Event
Transform talent with learning that works
Capability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More

As a result, Apple is increasingly leaning on its services segment, which includes businesses such as iCloud storage in addition to its music, television and movie content businesses.

It has announced several high-profile deals for original television content, including a forthcoming show with Oprah Winfrey, but has not yet said how it plans to distribute that content or when its service will launch.

Advertisement

The Samsung deal could be a step toward Apple distributing content to devices made by others. Apple makes a device called Apple TV that connects to a full television set, but has never produced a full set itself.

Read more: The $450 billion wipeout: Apple's value has fallen by more than Facebook's entire worth in 3 short months

Under the deal unveiled on Sunday, Samsung will add an app to its televisions that lets users browse and play their existing iTunes movies and television shows as well as purchase or rent new content. Samsung also said it would add Apple's AirPlay 2 software that will allow iPhone owners to stream content from their device to Samsung televisions.

Many existing deals between content companies and smart television makers involve the content companies paying television makers for the right to appear on their devices. Apple and Samsung both declined to comment on whether Apple is paying any fees or a percentage of sales made on the televisions under the new deal.

The impact of iTunes landing on Samsung movies will be muted for now. Since late 2017, consumers who purchased movies through iTunes have been able to watch them on any device, including Samsung televisions, that supported the Movies Anywhere consortium.

Advertisement

Films from Warner Bros, Walt Disney, Universal, Sony and Fox purchased through iTunes, Amazon, Google Play and Vudu could be viewed on the respective apps and devices and TVs that support the apps.

The Samsung deal is the second time in recent months in which Apple has made a pact with another technology company to land its services on their devices. In November, it said its Apple Music streaming service would be made available on Amazon's Echo smart speakers, despite Apple selling its own line of HomePod speakers that compete directly with Echo speakers.

Apple and Samsung are better known as fierce rivals, battling it out for smartphone sales across the world. Samsung is currently the world's biggest phone manufacturer, while Apple has traditionally been in first or second place, but was last year leapfrogged by China's Huawei.

Apple and Samsung have also fought a seven-running legal battle, as part of which Apple accused Samsung of ripping off its ideas and violating its patents. The companies settled last year, in a move that could have helped pave the way for this week's iTunes deal.

{{}}