Sything
Sything t1_j17xr1e wrote
Reply to comment by lordredapple in Microsoft-Activision deal: Gamers sue to stop merger by marketrent
This is a gross simplification but here goes nothing;
Letâs say Pepsi buys every shop in your local area and now theyâre all Pepsi stores, by your logic itâs fine if they only sell their own product, so then youâve only Pepsi available, but in turn they also increase their prices to maximise profits after achieving this monopoly and claim to be consumer friendly while stripping consumers of choice. Apple follows a similar model but they keep a can or two of Coca Cola âon displayâ priced well over their own and hidden in the store behind crates of Pepsi so they can claim theyâre consumer friendly.
By keeping such tight control over their App Store and not allowing consumers to use the products theyâve paid for as they please (by allowing them to modify or use whatever theyâd like on it), theyâre effectively âbuying up all the storesâ while also taking larger cuts than any other App Store on phones.
Itâs not so much forcing a Walmart to allow a mini-target, itâs more-so Walmart buying everything then leaving you with no choice as there are no competitors anymore since they effectively removed them by leaving consumers with no choice but their own âstoreâ. Itâs also unfair on the developers of the apps who will usually sell their product for the same price on either store while their profits are less on iPhones for the same product thanks to apples tight control.
In my opinion, it really is just about choice, would you rather more choice/options and the ability to do what you want with the products you pay for or would you prefer a company limiting your choices for the purpose of maximising their profits.
Anyways hope ya get my point stranger, all the best!
Sything t1_j18bpua wrote
Reply to comment by lordredapple in Microsoft-Activision deal: Gamers sue to stop merger by marketrent
No problem đ thanks for taking the time to read.
Iâd agree with some form of regulation and would love to see it done on many things, but itâs very hard to do with regards to pricing services (value is subjective to most people) and with most major businesses itâs all about maximising profits so theyâd look for loopholes or simply increase the price of everything so their profits remains the same and/or increase.
Sadly though Apple in particular has veered far from what most would like to see. A whole âright to repairâ movement essentially sparked thanks to apples anti-consumer practices where they essentially forced customers to get repairs done in their own stores, preventing customers from finding cheaper repair alternatives. In the US they also had government help in preventing alternative/independent repair shops from using refurbished/repaired parts (these were authentic MacBook and phone parts that were fixed but blocked from delivery).
Iâd have to give it to Apple that it does test the majority of software for malware but they still miss some too and thereâs lots of games that would be considered malware in my opinion (damages phones or collects data across multiple apps/spyware), they only have guarantees against âknownâ malware, so anything new thatâs purpose built can bypass their detection. But generally speaking App stores on either platform donât intentionally push malware onto consumers and do similar testing to search for known malware, itâs just easier to bypass and do on android since itâs a lot more open.
I may sound like Iâm shitting on Apple but iPhones, iPads and MacBooks are good quality products albeit overpriced they tend to work great imo and everything within the Apple brand does work very well together, usually an instant plug and play.