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by T-hawk
5328 days ago
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No, most customers will win. Their experience is improved by the layer of curating to weed out broken and scammy stuff. Most customers don't have needs that can't be satisfied within the set of apps that Microsoft and Apple approve, plus the entire public browser-accessible web. It's not black-and-white that "OPEN == GOOD" and "CLOSED == BAD". There are tradeoffs both ways. |
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Scammy stuff will still exists and only difference will be that customer will never know about it[1] and is going to live under false security.Companies will try to ban every person trying to expose vulnerabilities.
[1]http://www.darknet.org.uk/2011/11/apple-bans-security-resear...
Do you thing a small set of employees sitting in a company's approval department are experts of every single thing that can be ever conceived by a developer?
I am not against the idea of sand-boxing if it is built in the OS API. How approving a sand-boxed application is going to improve the security?