Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Software Google Government United States Apple

US Lawmakers Introduce Bill To Rein In Apple, Google App Stores (reuters.com) 48

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: A bipartisan trio of senators introduced a bill that would rein in app stores of companies they said exert too much market control, including Apple and Alphabet's Google. Democratic Senators Richard Blumenthal and Amy Klobuchar teamed up with Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn to sponsor the bill, which would bar big app stores from requiring app providers to use their payment system. It would also prohibit them from punishing apps that offer different prices or conditions through another app store or payment system.

"I found this predatory abuse of Apple and Google so deeply offensive on so many levels," Blumenthal said in an interview Wednesday. "Their power has reached a point where they are impacting the whole economy in stifling and strangling innovation." Blumenthal said he expected companion legislation in the House of Representatives "very soon."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

US Lawmakers Introduce Bill To Rein In Apple, Google App Stores

Comments Filter:
  • "I found this predatory abuse of Apple and Google so deeply offensive on so many levels," Blumenthal said in an interview Wednesday. "Their power has reached a point where they are impacting the whole economy in stifling and strangling innovation." Blumenthal said he expected companion legislation in the House of Representatives "very soon."

    Wonder if the "stifled and strangled" are in her district?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Wonder if the "stifled and strangled" are in her district?

      Mainland China?

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Entrope ( 68843 )

      Wonder if the "stifled and strangled" are in her district?

      That's a quote from Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), who -- as of TFS -- identifies as male, and has preferred pronouns he/his.

  • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2021 @06:08PM (#61681905)
    But, give developers a way to circumvent the data-theft checks, and you'll find none will bother with Apple's safeguards. Everyone will say "go to this website and download our app (which steals all your data and contacts and location history and mines on your device)". Don't force Apps to let them circumvent the App Store review process. It has kept us more safe, and forced developers to write better apps.

    I know this is tech blasphemy, but I see the other side, and I want no part of it.
    • by Vapula ( 14703 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2021 @06:32PM (#61681987)

      It's only about payment
      1) allow to use whatever payment they want
      2) allow to practice whatever price they want on other platform
      3) allow to practice whatever price they want on alternate payment system

      There is no valid justification to forbid to sell the same application at a lower price on the other platform... Development time and cost may be very different between platforms...

      There is nothing about making sideloading a required feature... only killing some abusive rules...

      • In this spirit, I am a proponent of the changes. However, I do feel conflicted because it was Apple's software to begin with, and they should be allowed to make whatever bad decisions they want on their platform. Freedom means having to live with choices of others as well. We agreed to whatever EULA terms when we purchased and activated the software. Now we are asking the government to deem illegal the terms we don't like? Seems unfair.

        On a more pragmatic matter, this seems like a fight within the softw
        • rather than one with customers... misspoke
        • Yah... that too. We all had the choice from the outset: You could hang Apple's "walled garden," of vetted, sandboxed, and reviewed apps that, while not perfect or invulnerable, are unlikely to be trojans for Russian and Chinese hackers and identity thieves. Or you could go the Android route, skip the garden, and open your back door to the entire jungle; and if you're good enough at wilderness survival to make it, good for you. If not? Oh well.

          What the hell do we gain by not having that choice anymore?

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Wednesday August 11, 2021 @09:49PM (#61682527)

          Plusses and minuses.

          I see it unfairly burdening Apple with support costs - their kid bought $1000 in smurfberries. Well, if it used Apple's payment system, Apple could refund it. But if the app used their own payment system, what then? Apple will get tons of support calls for it and they can't do anything - there's no transaction Apple did they could reverse. I suppose Apple could demand developers pay into a refund pot to handle refunds, which could also be seen as unfairly curbing payment methods too. But it would allow Apple to offer refunds to parents whose kids just spent the rent money.

          It goes for anything - if a purchase was made and Apple wasn't involved, Apple tech support would have to pawn it off to the developer. Then again, perhaps all Apple will say is "Sorry, we don't see that transaction in your account. Your best option is to call your credit card company and do a chargeback".

          On the plus side, the fact that if they used their own payment system, may be a disincentive. I mean, if I have to do in app payments, and you want me to give up my credit card number again? This may be enough friction that keeps developers on Apple's payment system .

          Maybe the solution is if you want to use your own payment system, you must make a free app - that way Apple washes itself of having to deal with multiple payment systems. If you want to charge for your app, you need to use Apple's payment system.

          So free apps can do whatever they want - use Apple's payment system, use their own, etc. Apps that cost money, well, since you're taking it 30% off anyways, then you much use Apple's payment system.

          Shouldn't impact many apps - Fortnite is free after all.

          • Your best option is to call your credit card company and do a chargeback

            As a former credit card customer service representative, I used to receive those calls from customers complaining about recurring credit card charges by companies like Directv, alarm companies, ISPs, etc. They want to cancel their service and their first instinct was to contact the credit card company when they should be contacting the company they have the service with and turning off the service.

            If you have a problem with a merchant, you should contact the merchant first. If you cannot resolve your issu

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

            I see it unfairly burdening Apple with support costs - their kid bought $1000 in smurfberries. Well, if it used Apple's payment system, Apple could refund it. But if the app used their own payment system, what then? Apple will get tons of support calls for it and they can't do anything

            Let me just be the first to respond to your comment by saying fuck them. They chose to take an anticompetitive position in between users and developers and now they can reap what they have sown. Google has been allowing sideloading all along and they don't seem to have been crushed under the weight of support cases.

            You iFanboys don't even know what your argument is. First it's "almost nobody will use it so why bother" which is bullshit because it's about freedom and choice, then "the walled garden keeps us

            • New to Apple are we?

              "The fact is that all the arguments against sideloading and against third party payment processors are both logical fallacies and bootlicking bullshit. Apple has sold you a bunch of provably false information and you've bought it, and are now holding your hands over your ears and shouting LA LA LA"

          • Or you can get card insurance to protect against smurfberries? I actually have that...

      • It's only about payment 1) allow using whatever payment they want 2) allow practicing whatever price they want on another platform 3) allow practicing whatever price they want on alternate payment system

        There is no valid justification to forbid to sell the same application at a lower price on the other platform... Development time and cost may be very different between platforms...

        There is nothing about making sideloading a required feature... only killing some abusive rules...

        On payments? This is the most delusional argument out there. Developers filing suit only wants more profit. That is as simple as these suites are. Have you ever heard of people complaining about the price of Candy Crush? You can pay 99c or 99 dollars. Up to you. The app is written to dive into people's addictions to derive money out of them. And Blizzard just wants to keep more of that money instead of giving it to Google or Apple. That is how simple the "Payment" argument is. If people were honest abou

    • The problem is, apple has abused their power on the app store.

      Example, try to find a console emulator there.

      You cant, because it doesnt produce apple any money and worse, might take customers away from their arcade.

      The "take you data" part is already lost, when even our own DMV sells your information without asking you or giving you a penny of the sale.

      At this point, I simply want to use my phone with the same freedom that I use my computer.

    • But, give developers a way to circumvent the data-theft checks

      What data theft checks? Apple is doing nothing effective along those lines, and is still delivering malware through their store on behalf of others while claiming that their walled garden and app inspection process protects users from malware. Well, it does not; Apple is in fact abetting the malware distribution at this time.

      Don't force Apps to let them circumvent the App Store review process. It has kept us more safe

      No, it has not. Immensely popular apps on the app store are malware.

      and forced developers to write better apps.

      Better malware, you mean.

      I know this is tech blasphemy, but I see the other side, and I want no part of it.

      It's only considered blasphemous because it is non-factual, and nerds care about such things

    • I agree. On apple, what's the complaint?
      1) they get a cut (of cost and subscriptions ) --- regardless if it's fair or not
      2) people want a 'choice' of app stores --- I wanna say something snarky about not paying for apps, but people would never pirate a $1 app . . . (sarcasm, sorry)

      Most everything else isn't a legit gripe. So, if they're going to force this, Apple is going to need to heavily sandbox (moreso than already) everything using a "wild west" API. They have to, because anything that breaks t
    • Because it has worked out so well thus far... [roll eyes]

      https://lifehacker.com/how-to-... [lifehacker.com]

      https://www.zdnet.com/article/... [zdnet.com]

    • But, give developers a way to circumvent the data-theft checks, and you'll find none will bother with Apple's safeguards. Everyone will say "go to this website and download our app (which steals all your data and contacts and location history and mines on your device)".

      This is the fallacy of extremes, there are a lot of other options than just "one app store" and "no app store". Having competing app stores will require individual stores to provide value for what they charge.

  • Senators ... sponsor the bill, which would bar big app stores from requiring app providers to use their payment system. It would also prohibit them from punishing apps that offer different prices or conditions through another app store or payment system.

    Congress will allow Medicare/Medicaid providers to use a different payment system and charge different prices for the same service, etc ...

    • by iserlohn ( 49556 )

      TIL that Google and Apple are public sector entities that ultimately answer to us via the democratic process, like Medicare and Medicaid.

  • This law should be a good start for allowing alternate methods of payments
    • What do you want? A phone with a single way to pay for apps, or one with 100,000 different ways to pay for apps? I'm as much for innovation as the next guy, but it seems to me that just making another payment method isn't innovation at all.
      • I want the proposal to be made into law. This is not about innovation, but instead about freedom. It is about giving developers the freedom to use whatever payment method they'd like.

        Also we'd still be buying apps from the AppStore, but for apps like Spotify, Netflix, Hulu etc, can charge their monthly fees via alternative methods instead of paying Apple 30% of all the monthly fees too
  • Playstation? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bidule ( 173941 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2021 @06:57PM (#61682069) Homepage

    And not a word is said about Sony, Microsoft, or Nintendo...

  • A test (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fuzi719 ( 1107665 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2021 @07:15PM (#61682119)
    You know how to determine just how ignorant and egregiously stupid our legislators are? Let them speak about technology and tech companies and introduce legislation concerning technology. With Blackburn and Blumenthal involved, you can bet whatever legislation they're putting forth was written by the lawyers for AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast. Just watch who will benefit the most: those three will have their own payment systems soon.
    • Don't be unreasonable. No need for a tech angle. You want a demonstration of ignorance just ask a legislators what was in the law they just voted on

    • You know how to determine just how ignorant and egregiously stupid our legislators are? Let them speak about technology and tech companies and introduce legislation concerning technology.

      Okay, with you so far...

      With Blackburn and Blumenthal involved, you can bet whatever legislation they're putting forth was written by the lawyers for AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast.

      Probably, but...

      Just watch who will benefit the most: those three will have their own payment systems soon.

      AT&T is partnered with Intuit and uses GoPayment. Verizon already has a "Merchant Services" arm which provides CC processing. So I guess that leaves Comcast. .333 is not too horrible for baseball, but is in general a failing grade.

  • To the Lotus Blossom Software factory, approved by the US congress - Perfect software, wonderful and problem free. We have a large selection of free software, and in order to install them, our free loading software make it all easy.

    Whatever could go wrong?

  • Oh... yay. (Score:1, Insightful)

    by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 )

    Tear down the App and Play stores... stick it to Apple and Google! And we can all go back to the free-for-all cesspit of shovelware and malware that was Cydia back in the jailbreaking days. Anyone not technically proficient enough to pick out and run antivirus on their phone? Fuck 'em! They deserve to have their identities stolen and bank accounts emptied by Russian and Chinese hackers. Enjoy your phone's day-long battery life? Too fucking bad. With no vetting, sandboxing, or other advantages that th

    • You are spot-on in my opinion, I had to read this out to my wife.
    • Re:Oh... yay. (Score:5, Informative)

      by aaronjl ( 8521603 ) on Thursday August 12, 2021 @02:25AM (#61683089)
      Most of the issues you talk about come from no more sandboxing. But this bill only allows apps to have their own payment system. This has nothing to do with allowing side loading or no more sandboxing.
      • I would estimate that 95 percent of the software development of these apps are done by Apple through very well tested and continuously developed APIs. This is offered to these companies for free. A modest 30 percent fee is peanuts for the quality of these APIs. But perhaps the fees should be doled out per api use? Want to license foundation dictionaries, 50 a month, or viewController, 300 a month. SwiftUI 800 a month, combine? That will be another 400.
        • I would estimate that 95 percent of the software development of these apps are done by Apple

          Well, that's provably, senselessly wrong right on the face.

          through very well tested and continuously developed APIs.

          The total volume of application code (all apps) outweighs the total volume of OS code (including bundled apps) by some massive factor.

          This is offered to these companies for free.

          Complete falsehood. First, you have to pay money to be an Apple Developer, unlike making apps for Android which are then sideloaded. Second, you have to have a Macintosh to develop iOS software, which also costs money. You could use a Hackintosh, but that's illegal and if you became successful while doing it you could

  • In IOS is coming baby!

  • I'm getting the feeling that this may be too little too late.

    The data mining, abuse the user, the "Trust" kingdom, telling the user what they can and cannot do, and just being complete pompous holier than thou and hypocritical asses has been going on for many years now and users have come to accept and expect all of this. What these senators propose is just a tiny drop in the bucket to put out this fire that has been raging for so long, amounting to little more than a feel good measure.

    What needs to be done

  • As opposed to that other Google, you mean?

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...