| You assert that the town and the marketplace are two separate monopolies. I disagree and assert that they're a single entity, because they are not separable. Neither could have been created without the other. And their cumulative success is (in many respects) dependent on them being intertwined. But even if you do insist on separating them, you don't get to arbitrarily bisect them wherever you want to suit your argument. The "retail" App Store is only the surface layer of the iOS app ecosystem which Apple has developed, it's certainly not the totality of it. There's the toolchain, APIs, documentation, training resources and many other things besides, which are all necessary parts to that marketplace's existence. You might argue that Apple chose to give away their developer tools rather than license their use with a revenue share arrangement (like Epic does with Unreal Engine). You might argue that Apple charges for their tools with the $99 annual developer fee. I disagree that these are relevant. How Apple chooses to monetise their own work is up to them. For example, Apple could have instead defined their 30% revenue share requirement as a license condition for the use of their tools and libraries. The outcome for consumers and developers would be largely identical, but the "store monopoly" argument would make a lot less sense. Even Epic themselves understand that developer ecosystems are valuable and it's fair for a percentage of top-line profit to go to them regardless how the app is sold or how payments work. More broadly I must admit some occasional frustration by people who insist Apple must change, as this insistence is all too often paired with a somewhat arrogant paternalism, that they know better than I do what I should want. "Free market" is certainly the simplest argument to side with and the easiest one to wax lyrical about, but that doesn't automatically make it the best one. I'm not going to spend too much time explaining why I think the iOS ecosystem would be worse if "free markets" were forced upon it, because unfortunately Hacker News debates on this topic generally see more people throwing down-votes rather than engaging with the debate. But fundamentally I see the difference of opinion stemming from whether you see the smartphone as a computing platform or an appliance bundled with systems administration services from the vendor. I think of my smartphone as an appliance, despite being a software developer by trade. But I'm glad that the market includes many brands of Android phone so that everyone who cares can have a choice. |