I genuinely don't get this line of thinking. This isn't about Google or Microsoft, rather it's about the end user who is essentially a customer of both parties. IMHO, Google aren't just screwing MSFT, they are screwing users, which doesn't really hold with the image that they like to portray. It's actually rather spiteful.
How is it spiteful to the 7 people who own Windows phones?
This is Google saying "because of their behaviors, we don't want to allow them to consume our services." Microsoft is trying to weasel this into good PR for themselves, but the fact is this: Google has no obligation to people that are not making them money. It is not their responsibility to keep people buying Microsoft phones.
> "How is it spiteful to the 7 people who own Windows phones?"
That is a snide comment that reveals much.
> 'This is Google saying "because of their behaviors, we don't want to allow them to consume our services."'
That right there. That is spiteful. It's not Microsoft that they are restricting, it's Google users; the very people that use YouTube. It's certainly not the behaviour of the company that Google projects itself to be. I totally agree that Google owe Microsoft nothing, but this has the potential to do much harm to their image. A good check is to switch the protagonists around and ask yourself how you would react then. I'm not suggesting for one minute that were Microsoft to do the same it would be OK (or that indeed it is or was OK). I'm suggesting that there appears to be a double standard being applied to Microsoft from more that a few parties. Google cannot have their cake and eat it, as the saying goes...
Edit: Cleaned up my shameful grammar and spelling...
How so? It's not that popular a device.[0] If you work at Microsoft or have a significant interest in them not failing, you might want to divulge your bias here.
>That right there. That is spiteful. It's not Microsoft that they are restricting, it's Google users; the very people that use YouTube.
You're treating YouTube as if it's water. It's a business.
>A good check is to switch the protagonists around and ask yourself how you would react then.
If Microsoft cut off access to Bing from Android Phones (and if, for this example, if Bing was as ubiquitous and useful as Google Search) due to Google flagrantly violating ToS, I'd understand and be mad at Google for selling me a device and then fucking me over by locking me away from a good service through their posturing.
Microsoft is becoming less relevant, but they're still trying to act like the big bully of yesteryear.
If you can't see it, there is no point explaining. There are significantly more than 7 users.
> You're treating YouTube as if it's water. It's a business.
You are semantically correct. 2 issues though. If it's business, surely developing a version for the device is worth the ad revenue. Also doesn't this directly contradict the benevolent and altruistic business image that Google like to project. Microsoft are trying to provide access to a popular service. Google are blocking it on frankly extremely spurious grounds and refusing to develop an app of their own (that I don't take issue with). For the final time; it's about users.
>If you can't see it, there is no point explaining. There are significantly more than 7 users.
I can see it. But you're acting as if Google just blackholed orphans from getting food.
>Microsoft are trying to provide access to a popular service. Google are blocking it on frankly extremely spurious grounds and refusing to develop an app of their own (that I don't take issue with). For the final time; it's about users.
Microsoft is trying to access a popular service while breaking the terms of service. What guarantee does Google have that Microsoft won't try to pull more shit in the future, requiring Google to take action in response (at a cost to themselves)? Everything is opportunity cost; why should Google spend any more time on Microsoft's phone's relatively small user base?
Edit: Also, Microsoft phone users could just open a webbrowser.