And I see it differently in that the named competition you mention above were not around when the innovations I mentioned were made - in spite of the monopoly.
Well, Nokia was around, but they only got into the telecom business in the mid '80s and mobile cell phones in '87
The first mobile phone was the Motorola in '73. The earliest commercialized fax over phone line dates back to '64. Modems over phone line dates back to the '20s. A version was developed by Bell Labs (AT&T) and started selling them to the public in '62. The more modern PC modem (remember the Hayes Modems of the 80s and 90s?) was developed by a couple of hardware guys for the Apple II in '77 and for the PC in '81.
All that innovation before AT&T was broken up in '84. That standardized connection didn't seem to stifle anything.
Look, my point is more about how trying to standardize a simple connector is so irrelevant to any idea of holding back innovation. To me, standardizing interconnectivity with all kinds of devices actually drives innovation. Locking down a device by one manufacturer so that you can only buy specific accessories, effectively sanctioned by that manufacturer through licensing fees, actually is the innovation killer. So, basically, what the EU suggests would actually open up a few things. But Apple doesn't want that. They want to keep things (the money) to themselves. And I'm all for sticking it to Apple. I don't care if it's a Government that's doing it. If it makes it better for more people and frees up innovation, great.