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by BenTheElder
2023 days ago
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It's a pretty excellent example precisely because the operating system typically already has controls over this behavior (installing kernel drivers..) > However, known user hostile players trying to have a go at people's personal devices under the guise of competition is something that we as consumers should be equally wary of. Is epic user hostile? Other than offering temporarily exclusive applications their store does not seem hostile ... > Because in the end, we won't be given much choice. Monopolies are not something exclusive to Apple, and big players will use their own monopolistic power to coerce users to install their privacy invading app store. Defeating hypothetical monopolistic practices by denying user choice and persisting an existing monopolistic practice sure is a take. |
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Let's see an example of dodgy kernel drivers. How about Easy Anti-Cheat? Go to their page at https://www.easy.ac/en-us/. Guess who develops it?
> hypothetical monopolistic practices
Hypothetical monopolistic practices really? Because I vividly recall Facebook skirting App Store security policies to make users install a privacy invading VPN app, which they also used to gather data on competitors[1]. But I'm sure that's fine because people have alternatives to Facebook. Or perhaps not[2].
[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15007454
[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25363366