- "이런 경험의 큰 부분은 우리가 제공하는 앱이 개인정보 보호, 보안, 콘텐트에 대한 최상의 표준을 유지하는 것을 확실하게 하는 것이다. 거의 200만개 앱을 제공하기 때문에 그들 중 어느 하나라도 사용함에 있어서 만족하기를 원한다."
— Wan Ki Choi (@wkchoi) September 25, 2020
- 새 앱스토어 전용 페이지 주소: https://t.co/ExlknBo16e
Apple is (temporarily) waiving its fee for Facebook’s paid online events feature https://t.co/SzzI3lZVPr
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) September 25, 2020
Apple doesn’t normally allow app developers to process payments for in-app purchases themselves or via third-party services. But it just made an exception for some. https://t.co/nfIkyRdIEI
— Sarah E. Needleman (@saraheneedleman) September 26, 2020
#Apple tells me that their #appstore concessions are “To ensure every developer can create & grow a successful business, Apple maintains a clear, consistent set of guidelines that apply equally to everyone.”
— Susan Li (@SusanLiTV) September 25, 2020
These concessions do not apply to #Fortnite tho https://t.co/UF9IbWbNVw
Businesses that host paid events on the social-networking giant’s mobile app won’t have to give 30% of sales to Apple through the end of the year https://t.co/nfIkyRdIEI
— Sarah E. Needleman (@saraheneedleman) September 25, 2020
Apple to drop 30% App Store fee for pandemic-hit businesses https://t.co/bm7P1a21cM
— Financial Times (@FT) September 25, 2020
Apple will temporarily drop its contentious 30% App Store fees for businesses that have been forced by the pandemic to pivot to online-only events https://t.co/OxHIP5x2sp
— Ahmed Al Omran (@ahmed) September 25, 2020
“We’re not a monopoly! Look how we can capriciously change our rules to benefit a subset of developers for a limited period of time” is not the slam-dunk Apple thinks it ishttps://t.co/a8TJwBPYZh
— emmmmm (@lazerwalker) September 25, 2020
NEW: After FB publicly shamed Apple for taking a 30% cut of transactions from its live events feature, claiming it was hurting businesses during the pandemic, Apple now says it will let FB users avoid those fees through the end of the year
— Kurt Wagner (@KurtWagner8) September 25, 2020
From August:https://t.co/e1JmkAU35a
No no no, @Apple, „temporarly doing the right thing“ is not the same as „doing the right thing“.
— Gernot (@Gernot) September 25, 2020
Sure, take a cut where appropriate, but don’t take it where not.
Apply rules consistently.
And don’t insist on crazy margins in a monopoly situation.
The 30% cut has to go. https://t.co/yMcs98bcF4
Apple is (temporarily) waiving its fee for Facebook’s paid online events feature https://t.co/SzzI3lZVPr
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) September 25, 2020
remember when Facebook uploaded entire SMS histories to their servers from Android phones with shaky consent? good times. https://t.co/DPweD65SLb
— alex hern (@alexhern) September 25, 2020
Step 1: clear the play field
— ukituki (@ukituki) September 25, 2020
Step 2: crowd out the Messages
Step 3: deploy Lbra https://t.co/4mrJeSoRsZ
Facebook wants Apple to loosen its grip on messaging.
— Alex Heath (@alexeheath) September 25, 2020
The head of Messenger tells me that iPhone owners should be able to pick outside apps as their default choice to replace Apple. Says it would allow FB to more fairly compete where iOS is dominant. https://t.co/Hiiou0h8oZ
Apple says it reversed the decision to help companies still adapting to digital amid the pandemic. The fees are waived until December 31. But they do gaming companies still have to pay.https://t.co/akkzCiswWG
— Steve Kovach (@stevekovach) September 25, 2020
"But the irony in Facebook’s recent criticism over Apple should not be lost: Facebook is also facing formal antitrust investigations from the Federal Trade Commission and nearly every state attorney general in the U.S."https://t.co/akkzCiswWG
— Steve Kovach (@stevekovach) September 25, 2020
Google counsel team have a mortgage to pay. Even with multiple app stores, I don't see this new rule going swiftly https://t.co/C6bKdJd2K4
— Alex B ? (@somospostpc) September 25, 2020
NEW: Apple reversed its decision to charge 30% for Facebook digital events. But the reversal does not apply to gaming companies. https://t.co/akkzCiswWG
— Steve Kovach (@stevekovach) September 25, 2020
Apple reverses decision to charge businesses fees for events, but Facebook still isn't happy https://t.co/c5gq8KkmPa by @stevekovach
— Sal Rodriguez ? (@sal19) September 25, 2020
Apple won't take its 30% when Facebook lets small businesses sell live online classes; same for ClassPass, as well as the virtual "experiences" Airbnb wants to sell. But that tax will come back in January.
— Peter Kafka (@pkafka) September 25, 2020
Wow, $FB flexing their muscles on $AAPL.
— Rihard Jarc (@RihardJarc) September 25, 2020
Seems Apple doesn't mind "fighting" with smaller companies like Epic but doesn't want a fight with a bigger "opponent" like Facebook.https://t.co/WqC4IPnAIn
All developers are treated the same
— Callum Jones (@icj_) September 25, 2020
All developers are treated the same
All developers are treated the same
...
...
Most developers are treated the same https://t.co/iIgmrw3Fo7
Delayed privacy features. Exemption that Fortnite couldn't get. What next? Messenger/WhatsApp can be default messaging app while Telegram can't? https://t.co/yTpcSZPYzC
— conFused (@SchollFused) September 25, 2020
This has... been Apple's policy on online events for months and it's been reported for months?https://t.co/DHYLPrUp4Khttps://t.co/p46NZFz6Nv https://t.co/wsblNRgXVm
— James Titcomb (@jamestitcomb) September 25, 2020
That’s sucks. So Apple will bend the knee to FB. Damn. Unexpected @tim_cook. So not apple. https://t.co/Dmy9dsxlE5
— Sai (@ssaig) September 25, 2020
Don't tell Epic Games ? https://t.co/wvZPCNcT82
— ???Joseph Huckaby (@jhuckaby) September 25, 2020
Apple’s decision to not collect its 30% tax on paid online events comes with a catch: gaming creators are excluded from using Facebook Pay in paid online events on iOS, so gaming creator Pages will only see Apple’s payment option and are subject to Apple’s 30% fee. https://t.co/4khnCGsi0H
— Vivek Sharma (@pucknorris) September 25, 2020
Apple is trying to grab 30% as a tax on all small businesses using Facebook to conduct transactions. Due to backlash, Apple decided to defer this by 3 months.
— Zach Vorhies (@Perpetualmaniac) September 25, 2020
It's time to confront this monopoly by Apple.https://t.co/A3zfM99A5y
News: Apple gives Facebook, Airbnb and Classpass a temporary Apple Tax break. https://t.co/nW33GZ04Zt
— Peter Kafka (@pkafka) September 25, 2020