Great news for our indie developers. Hear from @kamibox_ph @hopscotch @MySwimPro https://t.co/jyJOtqP5Lq
— Shaan Pruden (@shaanpruden) November 18, 2020
This is a great move. Hoping @GooglePlay to follow in the footsteps soon. https://t.co/Guh6ZdrlRp
— Suraj (@surajkrdubey) November 18, 2020
Quote from Cook is beyond cynical. Written in that faux-care style so beloved by lobbyists. Apple is making smaller app developers growl before Apple (this program isn't even automatic!), such that the abusive tax on payment processing is lowered from 10x to 5x the market rate. pic.twitter.com/mJCcCX3LbN
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Machiavelli would be so proud of Apple. Trying to split the App Store opposition with conditional charity concessions, they – a $2T conglomerate – get to paint any developer making more than $1m as greedy, always wanting more. As clever as its sick. https://t.co/SLTh3qMOnP
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Siri, show me someone who’s opinion on this would have been negative no matter what https://t.co/tIfuXO7vsO
— Jacob Eiting (@jeiting) November 18, 2020
I hope the irony of a two-trillion dollar corporation that doesn’t pay its taxes implementing a tiered tax system is not lost on all of you. https://t.co/9doPJDNqzU
— Aral Balkan ? (@aral@mastodon.ar.al) (@aral) November 18, 2020
This is cool for smaller app devs - Apple is chopping the App Store commission in half from Jan. 30 to 15 percent, includes existing devs. https://t.co/f2l5H10ysz
— Dan Grabham (@dangrabham) November 18, 2020
New: Facing antitrust scrutiny, Apple cut in half the commission it charges smaller app makers.
— Jack Nicas (@jacknicas) November 18, 2020
Starting on Jan. 1, developers with less than $1 million in app sales the previous year will pay Apple 15% instead of 30%.https://t.co/0ad1tVaPab
But even if Apple actually did move their rates down – not as conditional charity for smaller developers to beg for, but across the board – we still wouldn't be done! The root of the issue is the monopoly claim that Apple must process all payments, own all customer relationships.
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Never change, Apple. Never change.
— Shira Ovide (@ShiraOvide) November 18, 2020
"Apple said in a statement that it had made the change because 2020 was a difficult year for many small companies."
If you're going to read about Apple's new scheme to split the App Store opposition with a nearly cost-free charity program, make sure it's this piece from @jacknicas. It actually includes contextualization of the numbers, the scheme, not just a PR reprint. https://t.co/R5Wc5ffYyv
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
lawsuits from Epic Games, pressure from app developers like @dhh, and regulators circling has forced Apple into this. As David points out, it's classic divide and rule from Apple. It also shows that Apple's argument about the rules being the same for everyone is pure bullshit https://t.co/pq2iMthItB
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) November 18, 2020
Also as Dr. Evil’s flunkies will tell you, one million dollars ain’t what it used to be. Split out the cost of a salary or two and the cost of actually running a business and even Apple’s reduced 15% still feels like a big slice. That’s 150k our of 1m. Better than 300k obviously pic.twitter.com/P3mmz7hnSV
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 18, 2020
The caveat here: if you top $1M in a calendar year, you won’t be eligible for the 15% for the entire following calendar year, even if you make under $1 million that new year. The 15% is based on your prior year’s revenue.
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) November 18, 2020
This is such a win for small developers !
— Vijay Shekhar Sharma (@vijayshekhar) November 18, 2020
Great move by @Apple . https://t.co/14jAPlVYDy
I see Apple has innovatively invented copying the payment scale from the Microsoft Store but in an overly complicated way?
— Mary Branscombe (@marypcbuk) November 18, 2020
A good first step. But it still needs to be more granular. $1M cut off totally arbitrary, easy round number for them to pick which won’t impact bottom line too much. Payment lock-in still bigger issue. They need to win by offering best service developers choose to use... https://t.co/OHWMxQOQ6j
— M.G. Siegler (@mgsiegler) November 18, 2020
Apple: WE ARE RIGHT AND WE SHALL NEVER YIELD.
— Shira Ovide (@ShiraOvide) November 18, 2020
Also Apple: Yeah, let's cut in half the app store fee for smaller developers.
(To be clear, I think Apple is doing a smart thing here.) https://t.co/7p9AmbPlv2 by @jacknicas
(Deleted a prior tweet that tagged the wrong person.)
Power laws! https://t.co/68EVWsap2x
— Kyle Russell (@kylebrussell) November 18, 2020
It’s also a very big, open question whether or not this has any impact on Apple’s own bottom line on App Store revenue. My guess, nah. Here’s good context from @jacknicas https://t.co/0hYaCPYqOp
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 18, 2020
It doesn't seem to be 15% on your first $1,000,000. Doesn't that mean there's a perverse incentive to only ever make $999,999 ?
— Gareth Simpson (@xurble) November 18, 2020
Huge App Store news:
— Federico Viticci (@viticci) November 18, 2020
Apple is reducing commissions to 15% for developers who earned less than $1 million in a year.
This is called the App Store Small Business Program, and it starts January 1, 2021.
We have all the details here: https://t.co/YYGGqqsgIg pic.twitter.com/P3AwgLPZRw
Big Apple news. Apple is reducing its App Store cut to 15% for most app developers in January. This is a BIG deal for indie app developers that usually have to pay 30% on app revenues and in-app purchases. Details here: https://t.co/S878cPgzdf pic.twitter.com/Livxh3ofxW
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) November 18, 2020
And to frame that cut – $150,000!!! – as some sort of noble charity is really beyond the pale. Yes, it's better than the even more obscene $300,000 it used to cost to process $1m, but that's like saying it's better to have your arm cut off than your hand. Yeah, sure, but?!
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Also, checkout the way Apple is treating journalists, in hope that this hollow move sails through without much critique ? pic.twitter.com/4UzerT6ipr
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Even though I don’t think it solves the fundamental issues with the App Store, I still do think it’s a step in the right direction and it is unambiguously good to allow smaller devs and businesses to keep more money.
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 18, 2020
Big concession from Apple on app store commission, but also interestingly tactical: fee goes to 15% for less than $1m/year. Helps small developers and startups, but not Spotify or Epic. And Apple has a strong case on Epic but an unwinnable case on Spotify. https://t.co/9EfmrWv7tT
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) November 18, 2020
Also curious that the timing of this announcement comes after WWDC and all the summer antitrust hearings. IMO Apple got a lot of bad press from appearing to capitalise on the pandemic by imposing 30% fees on small businesses that went virtual, and that helped motivate this.
— Benjamin Mayo (@bzamayo) November 18, 2020
Interesting, but somewhat odd move. Smaller developers are more reliant on the app store than big brand ones who are still paying 30%. Appears largely aimed at regulators. https://t.co/WTCJvnMHmZ
— Sameer Singh (@sameer_singh17) November 18, 2020
It's a good move but it's aimed at small businesses that earn less than $1 million per year from all their apps.
— Daniel Ahmad (@ZhugeEX) November 18, 2020
In other words, this is great for small developers, but doesn't change anything in the case of Fortnite for example or any other app / game that does well. https://t.co/8OUZpfa9dg
@Apple cuts its distribution fee for most app developers in half. The change applies to the vast majority of developers, who have annual revenue under $1 million. It won’t likely mollify big players who are battling Apple over the fees, but it’s a smart and fair move, IMO. https://t.co/kDAHzfhD3h
— Walt Mossberg (@waltmossberg) November 18, 2020
Absolutely massive change to App Store policy: rate cut to 15% for all developers that make less than $1million per year. https://t.co/rGJs6ZVHwO
— Benjamin Mayo (@bzamayo) November 18, 2020
In the press release, Apple refers to the 30% rate as the "standard commission". But it’s hardly standard these days? I mean most apps don’t gross a million, video streaming apps have their own 15% program … the people paying 30% are mainly In-App Purchase powered games.
— Benjamin Mayo (@bzamayo) November 18, 2020
Devs who make less and $1 million per year can apply to get their app store fees reduced to 15%. This is a good move in the right direction, but underneath the feel-good number at the top are lots of provisos. https://t.co/judRl5cOY1
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 18, 2020
If I were a developer making $1.8M per year on the app store, I now have a strong incentive to divide my company in two, each of which making $0.9M https://t.co/1Tbh68K8Fp
— Mustapha Hamoui (@Beirutspring) November 18, 2020
Holy shit, they’re giving us a raise?!
— Marco Arment (@marcoarment) November 18, 2020
NEVER saw this one coming. Not in a million years.
Just stunned. Wow!https://t.co/4KZ1fDUGKK
What continues to be so perverse about Apple's stance that they're entitled to an exclusive hold on all payment processing via the App Store is they – of course!! – allow transactions on the web without it. Using Safari. On an iPhone. This isn't about security. It's about money.
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Worth pointing out that reducing Apple’s cut from 30% to 15% actually increases _your_ revenue by 21.43%.
— James Thomson (@jamesthomson) November 18, 2020
Maths!
Ahhh I’m SO happy.
— Ryan McLeod (@warpling) November 18, 2020
Essentially got a 20% raise overnight ?https://t.co/Aj8mHe3q9G
Apple reducing its commission to 15% will make a huge difference to small businesses and developers like me, and could have ripple effects across the industry and across other platforms. It’s a gesture of goodwill that arguably could have come sooner, this year being what it was
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) November 18, 2020
Two questions:
— Anton Nekhaenko (@derloos) November 18, 2020
1. If your app makes $1,000,001 in a calendar year, do you get to pay 30% just on the $1 that's above the threshold, or on the entire amount?
>>>
Correct. Apple’s charges all appear under a single code on your credit card bill, and it’s like trying to break into Fort Knox to find out where to find *all* your charges, clearly itemised, in one place https://t.co/YulcZ4F1Oo
— Gavin Costello (@gavincostello) November 18, 2020
Blimey! Someone has finally broken the cartel!
— Terence Eden (@edent) November 18, 2020
Now, if only they'd reduce the yearly licence fee so that non-profits could use Sign In With Apple. https://t.co/t9X5R0p9TV
Jack said it better: pic.twitter.com/r6C4B96cyG
— Shira Ovide (@ShiraOvide) November 18, 2020
It’s quite a thing that Apple chose to make devs apply instead of just making it an across the board cut. I suspect that it’s because it would be easy for people to game a $1 mil cap system with multiple accounts, so Apple just wants a more direct relationship
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 18, 2020
Put another way: Apple is keeping its 30% commission on the roughly 2% of companies that generate 95% of its App Store revenues. https://t.co/0ad1tVaPab
— Jack Nicas (@jacknicas) November 18, 2020
Yusssss.
— Curtis Herbert (@parrots) November 18, 2020
So, uh, can y’all just take the rest of the year off from complaining about them now? I truly think they deserve it, adding this to the list of “things we shipped in 2020.” https://t.co/acwIxc7Xps
Whether this move affects looming antitrust regulation, I doubt it — Apple could just as easily return to 30% tomorrow, or 50%, or 80%, and nothing would be there to stop them. That’s why regulators want to regulate
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) November 18, 2020
Boss who owns your house and the company store generously offers to give you extra food tickets after threat of strike https://t.co/WgnA0AMoKO
— Evan Greer (@evan_greer) November 18, 2020
Apple to reduce App Store fees for small businesses with under $1 million in revenues: https://t.co/XkCwvcUndJ
— Sarah Perez (@sarahintampa) November 18, 2020
Such a courageous industry-leading move by Apple, they're bravely willing to take a 50% reduction on 5% of their App Store revenuehttps://t.co/iWuWu17A3g pic.twitter.com/g8rI1QRPBV
— Jonas Downey (@jonasdowney) November 18, 2020
Absolutely huge developer news from Apple this morning https://t.co/6xJW1kICRZ
— iMore (@iMore) November 18, 2020
It looks like @EpicGames are laking the battle royale with @Apple to the shores of Australia...#Fortnite #gamingnews #gamenews #Apple #epicgames https://t.co/pBNvNHfB43
— Ste Knight (@SteMachine) November 18, 2020
Apple: WE ARE RIGHT AND WE SHALL NEVER YIELD.
— Shira Ovide (@ShiraOvide) November 18, 2020
Also Apple: Yeah, let's cut in half the app store fee for smaller developers.
(To be clear, I think Apple is doing a smart thing here.) https://t.co/7p9AmbPlv2 by @jacknicas
(Deleted a prior tweet that tagged the wrong person.)
Virtually no hit, that's how big. @jacknicas reported the math. If all eligible developers took advantage of this – and they won't, this is a mail-in rebate! – it would tinker with just 2.5% of App Store revenue! https://t.co/R5Wc5eYn9V
— DHH (@dhh) November 18, 2020
Big move amid antitrust scrutiny https://t.co/VFpfbBQnZm
— CeciliaKang (@ceciliakang) November 18, 2020
Apple Halves Its App Store Fee for the Smaller Companies - The New York Times https://t.co/uWKBhWtZDz
— lunamoth (@lunamoth) November 18, 2020
애플 연간 수익 100만 달러 (11억) 이하 중소 개발사 앱스토어 수수료 15% 로 인하에 영향 받는 개발사는 98% 로 추정, 이들 개발사의 매출은 5% 정도로 추정 (센서타워)
개발자들 호응을
As @aamirXDA pointed out, 98% of the devs will be relieved by they only account for 5% of the revenues. So, despite the goodwill, Apple here is a major winner.
— Tushar Mehta ? (@thetymonbay) November 18, 2020
Guess I was wrong, it is still run by sharks.
Related read: https://t.co/Orpov75SZO
Apple announced a new program under which it will take a smaller 15% cut from App Store sales for businesses earning less than $1 million selling their apps, rather than the standard 30% cut.https://t.co/K7K21GEdeO
— Axios (@axios) November 18, 2020
米国アップル社、売上一定額以下のアプリ配信の配信手数料を15%に引き下げると発表。現行は30%。夏に「フォートナイト」開発元のエピックゲームズがアップルの高額手数料を批判、配信停止騒動後に反トラスト法(独占禁止法)違反で訴訟を起こしていますhttps://t.co/if7v5EcpCZ
— xbox360 kyrie (@kyrie16) November 18, 2020
Apple will reduce App Store cut to 15 percent for most deva https://t.co/UgD2fR2PRM // Most of the time the high volume customers get the discount. This is the weird inversion that looming regulation can cause. Same happened to Windows.
— Steven Sinofsky (@stevesi) November 18, 2020
Apple to start taxing like the govhttps://t.co/VV6DZKBU0U
— Ryan Hoover (@rrhoover) November 18, 2020
Apple will reduce App Store cut to 15 percent for most developers starting January 1st https://t.co/0TRkwLAYr3 pic.twitter.com/YUvPKJSMcf
— The Verge (@verge) November 18, 2020
Apple is sweating about the antitrust suit. It’s cutting App Store rates for sellers making less than $1m to 15% at the start of next year. Except... the 2% this doesn’t impact make up 95% or so of the App Store revenue. https://t.co/pyUd3ZFmcT
— Mike Futter (@Futterish) November 18, 2020
now yes this change will only be for devs earning less than $1 million a year, so not epic, however if epic wasn’t lying about doing all this for the smaller app developers, this could bring the game back. let’s see if epic was telling the truth or not https://t.co/4i5aZiCefN
— GOLDEN (@imgoldenyt) November 18, 2020
Exactly what I've been talking about for years. Your move @GooglePlay.
— Francisco (@franciscof_1990) November 18, 2020
Quote from: https://t.co/7R1ksrTpEN pic.twitter.com/ep6R6QBhp4
This seems fairly huge yes?https://t.co/5qQydPlvLW
— Aaron San Filippo (@AeornFlippout) November 18, 2020
Epic’s @TimSweeneyEpic and Spotify, as well as fierce Apple critic @dhh, don’t have kind words about Apple’s new App Store fee cut, which they say only bolsters the argument the iOS platform is an uneven playing field. https://t.co/sSn7e0abfq
— Nick Statt (@nickstatt) November 18, 2020
Apple’s biggest App Store critics are not impressed with its new fee cut for small developers https://t.co/dUDxHjDcAK pic.twitter.com/VGfBlfkFQ2
— The Verge (@verge) November 18, 2020
수익 100만 달러 이하 개발사 수수료 15% 로 인하 2021년 1월 1일부터군요
— lunamoth (@lunamoth) November 18, 2020
에픽게임즈 관련해서 촉발된 애플 앱스토어 독점 관련 조사, 법정 싸움 방어 차원인듯
Apple will reduce App Store cut to 15 percent for most developers starting January 1st - The Verge https://t.co/qeP82XyfXD
Apple responds to the ongoing debate over the size of its App Store cut. It will be reduced to just 15% (down from 30%) for most developers starting January 1st https://t.co/mFM5W9XCVm
— Martin SFP Bryant (@MartinSFP) November 18, 2020
Apple’s reducing its App Store cut from developers making less than $1 million from 30 to 15%. Great move, and I bet other app stores follow suit. This is so awesome for indies. https://t.co/959FeeoqIR
— Sebastiaan de With (@sdw) November 18, 2020
Breaking news: Apple is reducing their commission on App Store sales to 15% for developers who earn less than $1 million per year! Amazing news for indie devs ?
— John Sundell (@johnsundell) November 18, 2020
Starts on January 1st, and we'll have a segment about it on this week's @stacktracepod ?https://t.co/D6ofDVRs7n
Apple says it’s slashing app store fees for small developers who make less than $1 million a year.
— Brian Fung (@b_fung) November 18, 2020
The new cut will be 15%, down from 30%.
Apple's fees have been a source of tension with devs — and a target for antitrust critics.
https://t.co/2JgBed9F8p
If you are of of the many developers that made less than 1 million US dollars on the App Store last year, this is of interest to you: Apple to lower rev share for qualifying developers that apply to 15% instead of 30%. https://t.co/unv7OncwvK
— Rami Ismail (رامي) (@tha_rami) November 18, 2020
This is a fantastic move from Apple – they are reducing their App Store commission to just 15% for developers earning up to $1 million per year. This is an immediate 20%+ pay rise for many, many people ?? https://t.co/uLh9tLjDOL
— Paul Hudson (@twostraws) November 18, 2020
News:
— Apple Terminal (@AppleTerminal) November 18, 2020
In an absolutely major shift in policy, @Apple will now take a 15% commission from developers who make less than $1 million a year vs. 30%.https://t.co/823wxtbLvp#Apple #AppleNews #AppStore pic.twitter.com/0J4hx7HZgl
Apple reducing the App Store commission from 30% to 15% for developers who earn less than $1 million per year is huge!https://t.co/Hr3c4l2WB6
— Shihab (JPEGuin) (@JPEGuin) November 18, 2020
I am thrilled to see this news from Apple.
— Novall Swift (@NovallSwift) November 18, 2020
The App Store Small Business Program means that for developers earning up to $1M, Apple will cut their commission rate from 30% to 15%.
This is more money back in the pockets of so many developers. ???https://t.co/SrsgHSWHEK https://t.co/v5PVBkRXME
Thanks, @Apple, this is a great step to support indie devs. Ya’ll have lots more to do, but thank you for listening.https://t.co/KlqU8PbClG
— Jared Sinclair (@jaredsinclair) November 18, 2020
It took two years for Halide to reach the point we could do it full time. A 15% bump in revenue would have let us go full indie much sooner.
— Halide (@halidecamera) November 18, 2020
This is amazing news:https://t.co/26o1xYjEqK
Yet another awesome thing Apple did on 2020 ?https://t.co/KaHR3RUPTS
— Bunn (@fcbunn) November 18, 2020
Surprising and welcome change from Apple. It’s a bit convoluted though, why not just say first $1M is 15%? Seems like you can get a Tax Cliff in the $1-1.3M range?https://t.co/8qzJiHJzRW pic.twitter.com/kt3VU6gqcw
— Paul Haddad (@tapbot_paul) November 18, 2020
#Apple #AppStore Small Business Program https://t.co/Wmrvy7oe5B
— Philip Schiller (@pschiller) November 18, 2020
https://t.co/KSV8sYp5DI
— Antoine v.d. SwiftLee ? (@twannl) November 18, 2020
This is great news for small apps and businesses! Going down to 15 percent is a big step forward supporting startups, and small apps to grow further. Applying is possible starting from January 1, 2021.
PR的には最高。この変更によってAppleに払っている98%の人たちが影響を受けてお金を払わなくて済むが、その人たちはアプリストアの5%の売上しか占めさなかった。
— Tetsuro Miyatake (@tmiyatake1) November 19, 2020
これでEpicは大手以外のサポートを得られなくなるかもしれない。https://t.co/Fsic1P1jyS
The cut amounts to about 2.5% of their AppStore revenue. How benevolent. https://t.co/5UswKMgaQd
— Glenn F. Henriksen (@henriksen) November 18, 2020
<desperately telephoning every uncle and random wedding guest to get their app ideas>https://t.co/q36FtoHIqL
— the good padraig (@Padraig) November 18, 2020
"isn't it great we just decided to do this for no reason!!"https://t.co/5dMUEt74FQ
— TechLinked (@TechLinkedYT) November 18, 2020
THIS is very interesting!https://t.co/4brVZC3Br5
— Jarryd Huntley #BlackLivesMatter (@JarrydHuntley) November 18, 2020
With the numbers of $50B appstore rev(2019) & devs under $1M rev representing 5% of the app store.
That means with the 15% cut change Apple is giving $375,000,000(!!) to devs, but it only making a 0.75% difference for Apple!??
BREAKING: Apple is cutting its App Store fee to 15% from January 1st
— Ben Walker (@bnwkr) November 18, 2020
Their original 30% fee was the basis of a lawsuit from Epic Gameshttps://t.co/tAA7TdlOCJ pic.twitter.com/j9b6zffVCH
As we think about sustainable business models for future versions of the internet, it is interesting to note that 2% of App store developers account for 95% of app sales - https://t.co/pFFsNoU9Lf
— Philip Rosedale (@philiprosedale) November 18, 2020
I fucking love this because it benefits small developers while simultaneously telling Epic and Spotify to get bent https://t.co/v1mR8ibAE8
— lucia ? (@RX6800) November 19, 2020
Appleのアプリストア手数料を15%にするのは、かなり戦略的に考えている判断。
— Tetsuro Miyatake (@tmiyatake1) November 19, 2020
これでEpic Gamesは30%のままの手数料を払わないといけないし、AppleとしてはEpic Gamesが出してた課題をかなり解決できているので、Epic Games側としては苦しいはず。https://t.co/Z6K9u6qfw5
Apple is reducing Apple Store cut to 15% for devs earning < $1 million, this is great news https://t.co/EL94L2KmaY pic.twitter.com/WC7a3sBBQh
— David Amador ? (@DJ_Link) November 18, 2020
애플, 1월 1일부터 대부분 개발자에게 앱스토어 수수료 15%로 인하할 것
— Wan Ki Choi (@wkchoi) November 18, 2020
- 애플, 수요일 오랫동안 지켜온 앱스토어 수수료 30%에서 절반인 15%로 인하 발표
- 이는 연 매출 100만 달러 이하인 개발자에게 해당
- 또한 모든 유료 앱과 인-앱 구매에 해당https://t.co/E0r4ekG6JR
According to this, Aldin’s annual revenue in VR is more than 98% of iOS developers. https://t.co/AmkbPrwp6G
— Hrafn Thorisson (@hrafntho) November 18, 2020
Apple’s biggest App Store critics are not impressed with its new fee cut for small developers https://t.co/0SFNpDLRu8 pic.twitter.com/Vtv3tQhyYY
— The Verge (@verge) November 19, 2020
App Store Small Business Programが適用されるiOSアプリデベロッパーは全体の98%で、昨年のApp Store収益の5%を占めるに過ぎないらしい。(分析会社Sensor Towerによる試算)https://t.co/PD7TxJGlBw
— Daigo Wakabayashi (@frnk) November 19, 2020
Wow, Apple just dropped a ?@appstore's "Small Business Program": half the store fee for businesses earning under $1m yearly! #15% https://t.co/olN6r2HcdM
— Thomasbcn (@Thomasbcn) November 18, 2020
Predicted this happening with the whole Epic fiasco. Great win for small indie developers.
— Maail (@maail) November 18, 2020
Before it was 30% commission to Apple for all purchases. Now 15% as long as you don’t exceed 1 Million USD in revenue. https://t.co/nS2yfHH2C3
Woah! This is HUGE. Apple will reduce their cut for small business (Under $1M revenue a year) to 15% under their small business program ?https://t.co/bJpfXe6jbg
— Donny Wals (@DonnyWals) November 18, 2020
Apple announces App Store Small Business Program which reduces commission to 15 percent for s... https://t.co/aZMDAeMBS3 #programming #softwareengineering #bigdata #datascience #analytics #ai #python #javascript
— Lewis Gavin (@GavLaaaaaaaa) November 18, 2020
Wow, Apple reducing their percentage cut to 15% for small businesses that make less that $1m a year!https://t.co/X4R5j5B8FZ
— James Thomson (@jamesthomson) November 18, 2020
Great news for indie developers! Apple reduces the cut to 15% for business under $1M revenue per year.https://t.co/7cisfM98Bh
— Majid Jabrayilov (@mecid) November 18, 2020
Apple reduces their App Store cut to 15% for businesses making less than $1 million/yr. Why not make this automatic and more progressive though? https://t.co/fawaGCcvXh
— kottke.org (@kottke) November 18, 2020