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The Almighty Buck Apple

Developers React To 27% Commission With Astonishment and Anger (9to5mac.com) 275

"Developers reacted with astonishment and anger at Apple's 27% commission policy as a minimal form of compliance with a new antitrust law regarding the App Store," reports 9to5Mac. After being ordered by Dutch regulators to allow developers to opt-out of the App Store payment platform, Apple announced today that it "would reduce its commission by only three percent" from the 30 percent commission it typically charges developers, reports 9to5Mac. Additionally, Apple said it would "impose onerous administrative overheads -- such as applying for permission to use a specific API, maintaining a separate version of the app, and filing reports with Apple." 9to5Mac highlights a number of reactions from disgruntled developers: Macworld did a great roundup of reactions to this by a number of well-known developers: "Apple was blasted by developers on Twitter who took issue with the exorbitant fee. Steve Troughton-Smith called the move 'absolutely vile' [...] Marco Arment wrote that you 'can just FEEL how much they despise having to do any of this.' Others noted that it 'defeats the purpose of the law' and that developers will still need to pay at least 3 percent to the payment provider, thus negating even the small savings."

Steve Troughton-Smith retweeted our story, and commented: "Absolutely vile. This says everything about @tim_cook's Apple and what it thinks of developers. I hope the company gets exactly what it deserves. Everybody on their executive team should be ashamed, and some of them should not be here when it's all over. We all see you."

Marco Arment highlighted the conditions imposed by Apple:

- Separate app, only available in Netherlands
- Cannot also support IAP
- Must display scary sheets before payment
- Website links are all to a single URL specified in Info.plist with no parameters
- Must submit monthly report to Apple listing EVERY external transaction

Adding: "And after you pay your ~3% to your payment processor, Apple's 27% commission takes you right back up to 30%. Glorious. Come on, THIS is comedy. Amazing, ridiculous comedy. I'd be surprised if a single app ever took them up on this. (And that's exactly by design.)"

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Developers React To 27% Commission With Astonishment and Anger

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  • by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @06:10AM (#62239631)
    No wonder Apple is making money by the boat load. But then you could create your own App Store, Oh wait you can't, Cool for Apple ;)
    • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @09:16AM (#62239885)

      Nobody else is.

      I've been writing ios apps since the store opened. A long time ago I worked out that you DONT want to be the guy who has to fork up the money for the project expecting to make a profit. Man did I learn it the hard way. Because nobody makes a profit. A bunch of us set up a company, and put together one of the first VOIP apps for IOS that could work with the terrible multitasking policy iOS had at the time , essentially using a specialized server to send a background notification to wake up the app when a call was incoming.

      So heres the problem. We quickly ran into a problem with patents, with the cheapest license we could get for G729 patents , 100% necessary at the time to interoperate with any VOIP, was $10 a handset. On top of that Apple wants 1/3. End result was a minimum $13 fee for the app just to break even. Now I'll grant much of the blame there was on the stupid patent system, but when your up againt random chinese apps that cost $1 and clearly arent paying for their patents , every cent counts.

      Nobody is making money on that place except for the kinds of scumsuckers that talk of "whales" and deliberately engineer apps to screw with peoples attention spans and exploit peoples cognitive faults when it comes to money and risk.

      So now I just write other peoples software and if they are the unicorn that actually makes money, well I'll be rejoycing for them, otherwise I'd rather someone else take the fall, and I'll just cut my paycheque and walk away.

  • by TheNameOfNick ( 7286618 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @06:27AM (#62239647)

    Apple established the concept of the app store, and you flocked to it because you had dollar signs in your eyes. For years on end the financial attractiveness of developing for the Apple walled garden was heralded to elevate yourselves over the poor Android developers. You made your bed, now lie in it. If Apple wants to take half or even more, that's their decision. You put Apple in that position to the detriment of all users. We went from the personal computer to a locked down consumer terminal for the cloud because of YOU and all you can think of is haggling about your share, you goddamn Judases.

    • ... We went from the personal computer to a locked down consumer terminal for the cloud because of YOU and all you can think of is haggling about your share...

      It's actually Apple that has been (successfully) shifting the conversation to "percentages", because there's no public sympathy for a contract dispute over percentages. It makes people tune out. The Epic lawsuit [reuters.com], the anti-trust investigations [theinformation.com] into Apple around [techradar.com] the world [reuters.com], the Bill that just reached the U.S. Senate [reuters.com], and more are all about fixing the fac

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      Apple established the concept of the app store

      Except that they didn't. Just about every feature phone prior to that had an app store, all the way back to circa 2001 or so. But those app stores were run by the cellular carriers, were specific to a particular model of phone (and carrier), and had maybe a dozen games on them. Apple didn't invent the app store; they just made it popular and more usable.

  • by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @06:30AM (#62239649)

    According to their Service Fees page [google.com], Google has a 4% reduction in service fees using payment systems outside of the app store, if I'm reading that correctly. But if you are making less than $1M/year, their take is only 15% normally and 11% using outside payment systems.

    Plus you have the benefit of reaching 70% of the mobile phone market vs. 30% [statcounter.com]. Although, Android users spend only a little over half as much [9to5mac.com] as their iOS counterparts. Still, it maths out better to develop for Android both in terms of market share x spending, and particularly in service fees.

  • Blatantly obvious (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bumblebees ( 1262534 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @06:34AM (#62239655)
    Its pretty obvious to everyone how greedy they are with such a move. And i think its the first nail in the coffin. Any goodwill any judge looking at this afterwards would possibly have had will have gone out the door by such a face slapp. Walled gardens will come to an end sooner or later be it 1 or 50 years in the future.
    • Its pretty obvious to everyone how greedy they are with such a move.

      Uh, today it is. Tomorrow, it will be a lot harder to cry "obvious" when everyone is charging the same. And then everyone collectively bends over and takes it up the ass. And Greed smiled upon the endless moons.

      Walled gardens will come to an end sooner or later be it 1 or 50 years in the future.

      50 years eh? Hell of a "campaign" offer you've got there to support how "obvious" this is, and how confident you are in defeating the Greed fueling it. No wonder we hate elected officials so much these days.

      • Apple is one of the most widely-held stocks. Millions of people own Apple. Why shouldn't the shareholders of Apple get more money from the platform that some developers?
        • There are levels to Greed, buried within tolerance. Be careful what you ask for. You'll get it, and far more. Greed will eat itself and not care about the pain.

          Millions of people own Apple.

          It's amazing how incredibly backwards your understanding is, with this. They didn't become a trillion dollar company and command this level of Corporate Arrogance, simply because shareholders.

          • I have been an Apple stockholder for almost 30 years. So I have a very good understanding of how the system works.

            My father had to retire due to disability in his 50's. Fortunately, as an Apple stockholder, he is able to live comfortably on the dividends.

            Every K-12 public school teacher in America holds Apple stock in their pension funds.

            Tell me how many of these whining, ungrateful developers contribute to these type of pro-social outcomes. Sounds like you are the backwards thinking one.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Its pretty obvious to everyone how greedy they are with such a move. And i think its the first nail in the coffin. Any goodwill any judge looking at this afterwards would possibly have had will have gone out the door by such a face slapp. Walled gardens will come to an end sooner or later be it 1 or 50 years in the future.

      A "walled garden" is a prison by another name.

      What Apple fears from this move is ultimately that other countries will follow suit. So they're trying to make it as much of a failure as they can whilst still appearing to "comply" with the law. That way they can go to the court of West Texas and say "see, it didn't work in foreign countries, don't do it here".

    • Its pretty obvious to everyone how greedy they are with such a move.
      And i think its the first nail in the coffin. Any goodwill any judge looking at this afterwards would possibly have had will have gone out the door by such a face slapp.

      Walled gardens will come to an end sooner or later be it 1 or 50 years in the future.

      Really?

      Google charges 26% commission on purchases outside of Google's Payment System. Apple is proposing 27%.

      So, what's your point?

    • Damn who modded this insightful? Walled gardens are here to stay, because people are nothing but a subspecies of great ape and they leave a layer of fecal material on everything they touch. Translation: large crowds of people tend to crapify everything around them. The internet is suffering from a massive case of tragedy-of-the-commons, and walled gardens are the only way of keeping a small corner of the ecosystem nice.

      This is just nature at work. The natural world is hardly an open source utopia - wal
  • DEVS have a cross-compile FEE of their own to charge back to Apple for every OS they compile, revise and upgrade. Too long has the AppStore party gone-on under a tide lifts all boats.

    SteveJobs is gone. Emerged is a monopoly worthy of the Infinity Loop he built.

    Failing that. DEVS can stand-up an AppsMall where their goods can be sold.

  • 30 - 10% = 27. If Appleâ(TM)s 30% commission was âoereduced by 3%â as stated in the article, the new commission would be 29.1%.
  • Sideloading (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RegistrationIsDumb83 ( 6517138 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @06:50AM (#62239671)
    The regulators should have insisted on allowing sideloading. Force Apple to make the sdks public with a consumer opt in to sideload. Then Apple will have no ability to control payment methods, fees, or censor apps they don't like. As long as they can kill an apps distribution, they'll always pull these shenanigans.
    • Re:Sideloading (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @08:26AM (#62239787)

      The regulators should have insisted on allowing sideloading. Force Apple to make the sdks public with a consumer opt in to sideload. Then Apple will have no ability to control payment methods, fees, or censor apps they don't like. As long as they can kill an apps distribution, they'll always pull these shenanigans.

      This, exactly. The problem isn't how much Apple charges app developers - it's that Apple is allowed to ram their walled garden down users' and devs' throats.

      Sure, have your walled garden; but let users either continue to live in Eden, or to eat the Apple and, with devices and freedoms in hand, escape... ;-}

      • Re:Sideloading (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NoMoreACs ( 6161580 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @01:44PM (#62240457)

        This, exactly. The problem isn't how much Apple charges app developers - it's that Apple is allowed to ram their walled garden down users' and devs' throats.

        Buy Android and STFU.

        We (Apple Users) like it here.

        As a User, Not having to do an hour's worth of research to try and discover whether some random App is going to be safe, combined with the added savings in time and frustration not having to scour the intarwebs trying to locate an App well makes up for the .1% of the time I wish that iOS App Store Rules make a particular Class of App available. I have a computer for those rare occasions.

        And not having to spew my CC info out to dozens of random "Third Party App Stores/Websites", plus being able to easily CANCEL Subscriptions is, quite frankly, Priceless; both to me, and AFAICT, to most Apple Users.

        So, who should Apple place their greatest emphasis on? Their (incredibly loyal) Userbase (which number in the BEELIONS!), or a bunch of random, greedy Developers (who are a much smaller number!), who think that their nearly 3/4 of a loaf (and for smaller Devs, and those selling long-term Subscriptions), 7/8 of a loaf), for Apple delivering many times the exposure that having their App in some random search aggregator would bring (nevermind handling payment processing, chargebacks/disputes, hosting, etc.), just isn't enough?

        But I guess we insignificant Users don't get to decide what we want, eh?

        • This seems to be what is always missed in the discussions about Apple products: Apple users buy Apple products because they like the way the Apple ecosystem works.

        • I agree that most, but certainly not all, Apple users won't want to have the option of side loading. However, if it's opt-in, I don't see why it would hurt you as long as you don't. Wouldn't it be cool, for those who want that, to get it? It changes nothing for you. Or do you have shares?
        • Re:Sideloading (Score:4, Insightful)

          by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @08:43PM (#62241467)
          I always find this attitude perplexing, what the fuck have you got against users having a choice? Are you an Apple shareholder or something? a user having the choice to opt out of your walled garden doesn't affect you one bit yet you somehow find it offensive?
    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      The regulators were working with a very limited complaint, and can't generally go outside that complaint without very good reason. "Apple Evil" isn't a good enough reason.

    • The regulators should have insisted on allowing sideloading. Force Apple to make the sdks public with a consumer opt in to sideload. Then Apple will have no ability to control payment methods, fees, or censor apps they don't like. As long as they can kill an apps distribution, they'll always pull these shenanigans.

      Apple could allow side loading and wall of most of the OS' features in the name of security. Access to them would be allowed if you allowed Apple to review the app and issue a certificate. That of course, cost an upfront fee plus 27% of your revenue, and we can audit sales.

  • If you don't like the outcome of the law written by current politicians, vote for politicians who will pass laws which will give the outcome you want. If there are enough people like you, you will get the outcome you want.

  • by Archtech ( 159117 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @07:03AM (#62239693)

    "Absolutely vile. This says everything about @tim_cook's Apple and what it thinks of developers".

    It's not so much "vile" as "nothing personal - just business". Developers have to understand how they are regarded by corporations like Apple. It doesn't think of them as people, but as raw material to be processed as quickly and efficiently, and at as high a profit, as possible.

    When will people understand that corporations are, in every significant respect, AIs? They have essentially one goal: to maximise profit (and perhaps share value). In linear programming you can optimise for only one variable, and for corporations that variable is money. Literally nothing else counts at all.

    • by Ed_1024 ( 744566 )

      Also, do people think that if Apple had gone OK, tell you what, we will take our commission down to 20% or even 15%, that any of that money now going to developers would be passed on to consumers in terms of cheaper apps?

      If it is a fight over profits between suppliers (Apple with the Store, developers with the apps) that has little chance of altering things significantly for the customer, why do governments get involved? If they make a law that pretty much specifically affects Apple over other businesses, w

    • "Absolutely vile. This says everything about @tim_cook's Apple and what it thinks of developers".

      It's not so much "vile" as "nothing personal - just business". Developers have to understand how they are regarded by corporations like Apple. It doesn't think of them as people, but as raw material to be processed as quickly and efficiently, and at as high a profit, as possible.

      While I do see your point, perhaps you should also be putting some or even most of that onus back on the companies who are advertising themselves as "Think Different" or "Don't Be Evil" to employees who are ordered to follow said company motto.

      Needless to say, the last lesson every employee should know about "nothing personal"; it also includes lying to your fucking face about being that "different" business.

    • As an Apple shareholder, I assure you I am a person and not a legal fiction. Why should developers get a bigger cut that shareholders? Did you know every single K-12 teacher in America has their pension funds in AAPL? Are they not people? Do they not bleed?
  • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @07:20AM (#62239715)
    Apple doesn't have to support 3rd party apps, or provide a store to sell them it. They could have created a completely closed system. They are not even close to monopolists - Android has twice their market share, and that's if you consider the market to be just smartphones/tablets. If you don't want to develop on Apple's terms, go elsewhere. Trying to say it's unfair (30% is within the range of typical retail margins or monopolistic (it isn't) simply shows you're every bit as greedy as they are.

    Where's all the outrage about games (Nintendo, Sony, Microsoft), where the platform creators have similar control?
    • by MeNeXT ( 200840 )

      How about we clean up marketing and laws first. When an item is sold, ALL keys must be provided to the purchaser. Digital and physical. Patents and Copyright should not be used to limit a purchase from their owners.

      • You are making a strawman argument. Not in the argument itself, but a strawman advocate: Apple users LOVE iOS, as evidenced by iPhones' profit dominance and Apple being the world's most admired brand 15 years in a row. It is YOU (probably not a user of Apple products) making an argument YOU want, NOT what Apple end users want.
    • Apple doesn't have to support 3rd party apps, or provide a store to sell them it.

      That is 100% true. And 100% irrelevant. The fact is they do support 3rd party apps and they do provide a store to sell them in,

      They could have created a completely closed system.

      But they didn't.

      They are not even close to monopolists

      I can't speak for the US, but in the UK 25% market share is enough to be considered a monopoly. Being a monopoly is not illegal. Abusing your market power is.

      Where's all the outrage about games (Nintendo, Sony, Microsoft), where the platform creators have similar control?

      They should all be held accountable if they abuse their market positions. Can you outline what their abuses are?
      Mostly though, whataboutery is not an argument

      • It's been 30% since day one and people chose to develop for iOS and now they're complaining. If they don't like it, they can support other larger brands. Personally, I like the walled garden approach because each time I use my gf's Android phone I find that most of the apps are much less polished, have less consistent UIs, etc it's a different world and different way of thinking. That walled garden keeps things cleaner, and I'm ok if we have 50% of the developers quit it as well.
        • People are allowed to participate in something and complain about it. Just because you accept it as the current best option doesn't mean its how it should work.

          Personally I gave up my iphone over 10 years ago because I hated being locked into the walled garden, but I understand people like it. There's nothing preventing Apple from running a secure walled garden. They could retain complete ownership and control of their store, but allow alternative stores. The only reason they don't do that is that alternati

      • In the US, a monopoly must be over 50%, typically 60%+. I'm curious if you think Target or Schwarz Group should be forced to carry certain products for government-set commission rates. The point if antitrust is to assure competition, not to pick winners and losers. Your solution doesn't sound like free market capitalism to me. It sounds like a centrally-planned economy.
        • I'm curious if you think Target or Schwarz Group should be forced to carry certain products for government-set commission rates.

          You should really retire this broken old argument that you keep spouting everywhere. Target is akin to AppStore; no one is claiming that AppStore should be required to sell products from other stores. We're arguing that Apple should allow iPhone to support non-Apple app stores. iPhone is not equal to AppStore.

    • Trying to say it's unfair (30% is within the range of typical retail margins or monopolistic (it isn't)

      30% is actually quite low compared to margins before app stores. Not only did a developer have to develop the app, getting to market involved copying, printing manuals, packaging, shipping, etc. all up front. Then of course there were returns and piracy. After the distributor and store took their cur a developer was lucky to get 30% of retail which my not have covered their costs, let alone make a profit.

      simply shows you're every bit as greedy as they are.

      Sure. They want more of the sales revenue at the same price to them as before. Not going to happen w

    • Apple doesn't have to support 3rd party apps?

      Did you think before you wrote this? Yes, Yes they do have to support 3rd party apps or their platform would be complete garbage. I shouldn't have to tell you that, you're on slashdot you should already know that. Would you go buy an iphone today if there were no 3rd party apps? Maybe you don't use 3rd party apps but i can assure you if that is the case then not everyone out there is like that. Many people today would not buy iphone if it had no 3rd party apps so yes they absolutely have to support 3rd

      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        You don't know the difference between "have to" and "want to." Apple didn't have to open their platform. They wanted to. They made a conscious decision that opening it up and charging 30% would maximize their profits while still attracting a sufficient number of developers. And, they were right. Lots of developers signed up, on well defined terms. They made a conscious decision that they could be successful under those terms.

        Devs have the choice of paying the commission, or not. If they decide that the com
  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @07:33AM (#62239727)

    They don't have a history of simply enjoying getting dicked around. I largely expect a 2 word response from the regulator, one of those words being "off".

    • Do you really think a protectionist/traditionalist war with Europe's largest market (USA) is a good idea? The USA can start "regulating" (i.e., shaking down) European businesses. Europe needs the US markets more than the US needs theirs.
  • Commission (Score:5, Informative)

    by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @08:49AM (#62239831)

    Microsoft's app store takes a 30% commission, for both Windows and XBox. Sony's Playstation store takes a 30% commission. Up until March of last year, the Google Android store took a 30% commission, before dropping it to 15% for subscriptions, everything else is still 30%. Amazon's app store is 30%. Samsung Galaxy store is 30%.

    It's almost as if it's an industry standard or something.

    https://www.statista.com/stati... [statista.com]

    • by schwit1 ( 797399 )

      Isn't that called collusion? Agreeing not to compete on price is a crime?

      • Isn't that called collusion? Agreeing not to compete on price is a crime?

        Only if we get together and agree on pricing. I can match a competitor's pricing and not get into a price war, ensuring profit for both of us. A 30 day price match also ensures neither lower prices because then both get less money; while encouraging people to buy because they are "protected from a price drop."

    • Google allows sideloading, and alternate app stores, so we can dispense with that; there is no restraint of trade there. I had no problem using Chrome to install F-Droid on my phone. That leaves just the game consoles, which are coming up next after Apple.

      • Google allows sideloading, and alternate app stores, so we can dispense with that; there is no restraint of trade there. I had no problem using Chrome to install F-Droid on my phone. That leaves just the game consoles, which are coming up next after Apple.

        While Apple's walled garden may get breeched, I doubt it will be the great new world many think. Apple will find ways to recoup the lost revenue in fees to developers, resulting in higher up front costs, limit access to features in the name of security, etc. While big developers can probably absorb those costs and the costs of running an App Store, smaller ones will likely get squeezed.

        As for competing app stores, the upfront and ongoing costs to develop are truly viable alternative to Apple is likely to r

        • While Apple's walled garden may get breeched, I doubt it will be the great new world many think. Apple will find ways to recoup the lost revenue in fees to developers, resulting in higher up front costs, limit access to features in the name of security, etc. While big developers can probably absorb those costs and the costs of running an App Store, smaller ones will likely get squeezed.

          If they do that, then they shift the balance of benefit towards focusing on Android; there is "piracy" (yar!) there but that's also a common vector of infection so many people still choose to pay for software, and the majority of users in the world are using Android so the potential market is very much larger. Just as Apple was forced to have apps when they originally only supported webapps, they will be forced to set terms which are not too onerous if they want anything other than big name apps and small n

          • While Apple's walled garden may get breeched, I doubt it will be the great new world many think. Apple will find ways to recoup the lost revenue in fees to developers, resulting in higher up front costs, limit access to features in the name of security, etc. While big developers can probably absorb those costs and the costs of running an App Store, smaller ones will likely get squeezed.

            If they do that, then they shift the balance of benefit towards focusing on Android; there is "piracy" (yar!) there but that's also a common vector of infection so many people still choose to pay for software, and the majority of users in the world are using Android so the potential market is very much larger. Just as Apple was forced to have apps when they originally only supported webapps, they will be forced to set terms which are not too onerous if they want anything other than big name apps and small name trojans.

            While the Android market is larger, it hasn't shown the willingness to pay like Apple's users have. If it was better, they'd already have dropped Apple to focus on Android. The current cost structure makes Apple very attractive, and Apple could maintain that while adding costs for developers who decide to go on tehir own.

            As for competing app stores, the upfront and ongoing costs to develop are truly viable alternative to Apple is likely to result in fees close to Apple's anyway for access to a smaller audience.

            I predict that if Apple is forced to support alternate app stores, Amazon will produce one. But more importantly, there are plenty of small app stores with specific focuses which are plenty viable on Android. The best known one is obviously F-Droid, and it's not a commercial interest. It's utterly viable.

            Amazon has one, and charges the same as Apple at the top and higher 20% vs 15% for smaller developers. It hasn't exactly been a roaring success and I doubt an Apple one would be either.

            • Which is my point. Developers want more of the sales but won't want to give up the benefits of Apple's App Store; it's simple greed in the end.

              What's being sought here is choice. Some developers will choose to stick with Apple, and some won't. That's a free market.

              • Which is my point. Developers want more of the sales but won't want to give up the benefits of Apple's App Store; it's simple greed in the end.

                What's being sought here is choice. Some developers will choose to stick with Apple, and some won't. That's a free market.

                True, but a free market also is allowing Apple to chose how it prices for access to its tools, OS as well as to drop developers that are not profitable enough. A free market would let Apple charge per download for free apps, which means apps such as Fortnite would cost money to EPIC just to have it on the store. Epic could then open their own store if you can sideload, but then Apple could charge for certification based on say the user base, and require audits to validate the numbers. Apple will act to pro

    • Yes they are all following Apple's lead in charging 30%, you left that part out. Did you not know that? or did you chose to deliberately leave that part out? Also you neglected to mention that some of the platforms you mentioned allows sideloading. Samsung, Microsoft, Google and Amazon i know of.
      • Yes they are all following Apple's lead in charging 30%, you left that part out. Did you not know that? or did you chose to deliberately leave that part out? Also you neglected to mention that some of the platforms you mentioned allows sideloading. Samsung, Microsoft, Google and Amazon i know of.

        More likely, they sharpened their pencils, did their own cost-analysis, and came to the conclusion that Apple got it about right.

        Did you not know that?

    • by paulatz ( 744216 )
      I initially subscribed to Netflix on the Android app, paying via Google. After a few months I got an email that to continue my subscription i would need to pay directly with them. Fair enough. I gave Netflix my card number and kept watching. Google is cool with that, Netflix is still in their app store.

      If a developer does something similar with the iOS version of an app, the greedy Apple will (and did) ban ALL their apps with no appeal.

  • by Balthisar ( 649688 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @09:40AM (#62239941) Homepage

    Why do I seem to be the only one not bothered by this? It's Apple's platform. My PS5 is Sony's platform. I didn't have to buy either of these, and I had to work hard to buy the latter. Don't like the game, don't play. It's not like iOS is a monopoly.

    • Do you develop for Apple platform? This article is about developers being astonished and angry. It seems you are speaking from a consumer perspective.
      • And it is not a matter of choice what platform developers use? Or to even become an mobile app developer?
      • Developers are ingrates. Apple has created BILLIONS in wealth for developers, who used to be "wage slaves" working in cubicles. Now they get a 73% piece of this large pie. NONE OF THIS PIE WOULD EXIST WITHOUT APPLE. Go back and look where the development money was flowing before iPhone. Desktops. Where the vast majority of software development money flowed to Microsoft. iOS changed all of that. Your comparison should not be iOS to Android. It should be iOS to Windows. And iPhones to Nokia's 9000.
  • I guess some people do not have a choice, but those will not be the best ones. Seems there is the usual stupid short-sighted "MBA" mentality at work at Apple.

    • 1) Apple is the world's most admired brand 15 years in a row
      2) Apple is the world's most profitable company, making millions of shareholders money
      3) Apple commands 98% of the smartphone profits
      4) iOS commands the lion's share of software revenues
      5) iOS commands the lion's share of ad revenues (so much so that Google pays them billions to be the default search engine!)

      As an Apple shareholder, it sounds to me like them MBA's know what they are doing.
  • Then don't develop for them. That's the power you have.

    What's that, you'd lose a lucrative market? Well then it's not a matter of principle for you, but a business calculation. Kind of like the calculation Apple is making.

  • At least you can side load on Android. It's a pain in the ass for your average dumb consumer, but its still lightyears ahead of where Apple is. I used to be an Apple fan boy, but I can't in good conscience support them now.

  • I think 30% is too much of a take, let's get that out of the way.

    But the only way you can be angry here is if for some misguided reason you thought something else was going to happen. Apple's case vs. Epic established very clearly that they can charge whatever they want as an access fee to the platform. The 30% on sale is merely the easiest way for them to do so, but if they're forced to open up the payment side, they're still going to take their cut.

    Indeed, this is by far the most consistent behaviour from

  • you do what the court tells you to, and you pay what the court tells you to pay. And not a single penny more. Thats what happens after a court case. People are angry that Apple isn’t paying MORE than the minimum? That’s really rich - how many of these people voluntarily pay extra taxes, above the minimum, just to be nice? A big fat zero.

    This is a fight over money, and when a money fight plays out in court, it’s a gloves-are-off kind of thing. Apple will grudgingly do what they are ord
  • Reducing commission from 30% to 27% is a 10% reduction of 3 percentage points, not a 3% reduction. Journalists = idiots.

  • Hey dipshit developers!

    What about what Apple Users, you know, the ones who buy your mostly lame-ass Apps, want?!?

    Notice the utter and complete lack of Articles regarding User Outrage at not being able to have alternate App Stores or Payment Methods?

    Wonder why? (And no, it's not Stockholm Syndrome).

    If you are a dissatisfied Apple Developer, stop torturing yourself! Go Develop for Android. We won't care. Honest!

    Until then, STFU. We like it here, and we number into the Billions

    Apple has their Priorities set ju

"Money is the root of all money." -- the moving finger

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