| I don't think it's a reasonable argument to put people oppressed due to their race with people who want their smartphone to work a bit differently at the same level. > if you run a business, you have to serve everyone, end of story This isn't even true! You can deny service to anyone for any reason as long as it's not a protected characteristic! Apple already cannot deny your app based on your race. If a restaurant doesn't like your attitude they can ask you to leave. Can't Apple do the same? > Again, how exactly does that inconvenience you, personally? Because the smartphone gets worse. Less locked-down, less simple, more complex, more avenues of attack. More expensive to make and maintain. But why does anyone have to justify why they don't like it? I think 'I don't want to do this' should be reason enough for Apple to not do it. As long as they aren't impacting people who aren't their customers it's their business not yours. > no one is imposing anything on you Yes you are you want to impose that Apple change their software to suit you - it's selfish. You want it your way, I want it my way. Hope can we resolve this? How about we let Apple choose who to market to? We can't make it a legally protected right to have products designed for people's random whims. |
Well, perhaps, my broader point is that the ability of businesses to govern themselves and set their own rules does end somewhere, and that line is decided by societies and can change with time. Things that were acceptable few years ago maybe aren't acceptable now, and vice versa.
>>Because the smartphone gets worse. Less locked-down, less simple, more complex, more avenues of attack
I just don't see that at all, sorry. The experience for 99.99% users won't change at all. Apple could have enabled this last week and you wouldn't have seen any difference at all.
>>We can't make it a legally protected right to have products designed for people's random whims.
Well, but it's not just a random whim, that's the crux of the issue. Once the size of a company and the market it controls gets big enough, it's only natural that they are forced to open to others. It happened to every industry before, why should apple be immune to this? It's the whole epic vs apple discussion again - if two sides want to engage in lawful business contract(sell each other software in this case) why should apple be the arbiter of these transactions? Or rather - why should you, the owner of your smartphone, be forced to use apple as the arbiter.
>>How about we let Apple choose who to market to?
They still can, literally nothing changes on that front. They still market to the same people, they still curate the apps like they used to, they still have 100% control of their app store and the device. The only thing that I would like to change is that ability to say "this is my device apple, I paid for it, let me install software that didn't go through your filter". Again, entirely optional. But we looped back to the first point that we are going to disagree on again - you think that will make the experience worse, I don't think it will.
I think we should agree to part ways on that - the discussion is as always enjoyable, but we might have exhausted the potential here :-)