"Competition" doesn't have to be narrowly defined.
In general, Apple, Google, and Facebook are 3 of the largest technology companies in the world. In general, they have areas where their interests overlap (messaging as one good example of this).
Hindering the ability of Google/ FB to develop on iOS could absolutely be seen as an anticompetitive measure by Apple.
No, Facebook/Google internal apps fall into two categories:
- Utilities that are only useful to employees of those companies (cafeteria menus, shuttle schedules, resources for salespeople on the go, etc.).
- Pre-release/testing (aka dogfood) versions of the apps they distribute to the public, for employees to use and find bugs on before they make it out to normal users.
Neither of those are pools that Apple wants to play in.
...and I guess there's a third category:
- Apps used gain "competitive intelligence" and spy on users.
In general, Apple, Google, and Facebook are 3 of the largest technology companies in the world. In general, they have areas where their interests overlap (messaging as one good example of this).
Hindering the ability of Google/ FB to develop on iOS could absolutely be seen as an anticompetitive measure by Apple.