this post was submitted on 12 Dec 2023
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[–] deweydecibel@lemmy.world 9 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (2 children)

It's so frustrating seeing this question constantly in all these threads when this has been explained.

iOS is locked down. It is not an open, competitive market. That in itself is not against the law, and it won't be considered an anti-trust issue until the market share grows.

Android is not locked down, which means it's a competitive marketplace.

Google was not doing the same thing as Apple. Google was using shady deals to make Android less competitive. iOS was never competitive to begin with.

Apple got off on a technicality, basically.

What Apple does is shitty and deserves regulating, but apparently we have a ways to go before we reach the EU's level of understanding on this.

[–] woelkchen@lemmy.world 5 points 11 months ago

It’s so frustrating seeing this question constantly in all these threads when this has been explained.

I've read your comment as well as a bunch of articles and I still don't understand it. From the article: "[Epic] wants the court to tell Google that every app developer has total freedom to introduce its own app stores and its own billing systems on Android". My Samsung phones comes with two completely different app stores out of the box, the Google Play one and the Samsung Galaxy one. The latter offers the Epic Games Store. I really cannot wrap my head around why in this specific case Google is being anti competitive.

To get access to the Play Store, OEMs have to bundle a bunch of additional apps and services. That I get for being anti competitive but that's not what Epic's case was about. They didn't sue about their web search being disadvantaged by the Google Search bar mandate. They didn't sue because they made a web browser nobody is using because of the Chrome mandate. They sued and apparently argued successfully that they cannot get their store onto Android phones and yet, as stated, my phone already comes with two app stores and EGS is listed in the second one.

[–] Ottomateeverything@lemmy.world 3 points 11 months ago

It's so frustrating seeing so many people repost this shit thinking that repeating the same garbage is helpful.

No one gives a fuck about the "legal" definition of why this is "allowed". Looking at this with basic common sense, what Apple is getting away with is much worse than what Google is getting pegged for.

People complaining don't care that there's a stupid loophole in the legal definitions as to why Apple is allowed to do this. If the laws and definitions make that OK, and Google's actions are held to be more "anti competitive" then the laws and definitions need to change.

That's what people are complaining about. Not that "oh what's the legal loophole that allows this". No one cares about the legal shit that allows this. That's why they keep complaining "even after this has been answered".