| > Of course they do? Just because they created a platform long ago doesn’t make it public If that's what you think matters above all else, would you support a literal mafia group taking a cut if they had started the market in that particular city? > public property It's a market, not property. But Apple owns none of the iPhones, so why do they get a say? > The value of their platform is in both hardware and software by the way. They shouldn't be artificially tied together by DRM. |
This is called being a "landlord" and it's actually completely legal.
You buy some land, you build a mall, you invite shopkeepers to set up shops and sell to customers visiting the mall, and the shopkeepers give you $$$$ every month, forever. If they ever stop paying, they lose their shops.
Even though it's shopkeepers that draw customers to the mall in the first place, and even though the shopkeepers are covering all the maintenance costs of the mall, you get paid anyway. Because you own the mall.
So if a mafia group created a market, took a cut from every shop, and threw out anyone who wouldn't pay them their cut? That's actually a legitimate business.