▲ | lolinder 4 days ago | |||||||
That's not a penalty for steering users, that's Apple's commission for running the store. Their position has always been that the 30% is not a payment processing fee, it's an App Store fee, and the court agreed with them that that is acceptable. So steer away, but pay your dues manually if you do so. I'm honestly shocked how many people thought that the outcome would have been anything else. Apple has been very consistent in emphasizing that the 30% is not the payment processing fee, so the idea that getting paid with your own payment processor would bypass the fee was always absurd. The best developers can hope for is for US regulators to follow the EU and force Apple to allow alternative stores with lower fees. There was never a chance that the government would ban Apple from charging its fee. | ||||||||
▲ | talldayo 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I'm honestly shocked at how many people seem to ignore Apple's developer fee. The Core Technology fee is a hackneyed attempt at trying to preserve the same broken system, and it too will be removed in time. It was only allowed to exist unchallenged when Apple created a minuscule loophole for nonprofits, and even then it was the cause of a second EU probe: https://www.cnbc.com/2024/06/24/apple-app-store-rules-are-in... You keep showing up in these threads to repeat the same "this is how it is" shtick, but you're seemingly terrified of the "what could be" aspect. Apple's abuse of their coalesced power is still illegal in Europe and Apple is still in the process of designing their remediation. If the US wasn't fundamentally corrupt Apple would have been put on trial years ago - citing America's preliminary rulings is less of a feather in Apple's cap and more an example of how far consumer protections have fallen in the West. | ||||||||
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▲ | TheDong 3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
Apple is happy to take 0% of offsite payments if you don’t link to them though, so clearly apple is fine with an app store fee of 0, ie for spotify. The only difference is if the app error says “You can’t pay in-app” or if it says “You can’t pay in app, you can pay on our site” Restricting apps from informing users still seems like obvious harm to users, like if a retail store made a rule that “the manual that comes with your product can’t contain your homepage because you have an online shop that might have better prices than us” If it were the cost of running the store, truly, it would charge based on app downloads or such. Not based on if users click a link to amazon.com in the kindle app and then buy 2 books or 3. | ||||||||
▲ | YetAnotherNick 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> it's an App Store fee I think Apple said something like SDK fee, which should even apply outside app store. |