• @[email protected]
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    130
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    4 months ago

    FUUUUCK YEAH, long overdue.

    1. Force them to allow users to use different chat apps with SMS.
    2. Force them to allow “side-loading” 3rd party apps and stores (exactly like you can already do on MacOS).
    3. Require unlockable bootloaders and/or 3rd party OS with reasonable security protections.
    4. Ban “parts pairing” and require Apple to make OEM components available for purchase from 3rd parties, on all devices.
    5. Force them to allow the use of hardware without an account.

    That will be a good start. Hell I might even buy an Apple device if they were able to get all of that.

    And to be clear, all of this should apply to all other companies but Apple are the most egregious violators.

    • @[email protected]
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      774 months ago
      1. Force them to allow the use of hardware without an account.

      This should be a rule for all products.

    • 100
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      184 months ago

      problem is that they are ready to do anything to keep their locked ecosystem (see how they sabotaging alt stores in EU)

      you have to stomp apples anticompetive strategies HARD

      • Dojan
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        14 months ago

        Yeah and then keep stomping.

        I’m loving how governments are finally starting to stomp on corporations. I only wish they’d stomp *harder. *

          • Dojan
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            14 months ago

            I’m not. But yeah, I’d easily vote for Biden. Not because he strikes me as a good and capable president, quite far from it, but because he’s obviously leaps and bounds better than the other train wreck of a human being.

            Honestly American politics would be funny in their ridiculousness if they didn’t set the tone for politics here in the years to come.

    • Ghostalmedia
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      114 months ago

      Can’t you already do #5?

      I have Macs and iOS devices that aren’t logged into an iCloud account.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        I dunno. I used one for 5 minutes last week and I wasn’t able to update the operating system or install any apps without logging in with Apple id

        I was trying to upgrade a family member’s SSD and it was an absolute nightmare but I got it done eventually.

        • Ghostalmedia
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          24 months ago

          Installing apps on iOS is good point. You need an account. MacOS doesn’t have that constraint.

            • Ghostalmedia
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              -14 months ago

              You need an Apple ID for the Mac’s App Store, but the Mac’s App Store is very much the second banana on MacOS. You can open up Chrome or Firefox and download an installer for any ‘ol app, or another app marketplace entirely.

              That said, if a developer hasn’t registered as a “Trusted developer” with Apple, installing an app will ask the user if they’re sure that they want to install the program. All of the settings around trusting known developers are at the OS account level. They require a local admin login, not an Apple ID. Its somewhat similar to what Google does with Android.

              • @[email protected]
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                54 months ago

                You need an Apple ID for the Mac’s App Store

                Listen, I know nothing about this, but I had to update a Mac recently, and as far as I can tell, the only way to do that is through the App Store.

                • Ghostalmedia
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                  14 months ago

                  Yeah, I was mostly referring to the “install apps” part of your comment. You can just download installers from websites. Very few Mac developers rely on the AppStore as their only means to distribute apps.

                  As for the OS updates, the stuff around major point releases keeps changing. They were forcing people to download installers for major point releases in the AppStore for certain versions of MacOS. I don’t know if that’s still the case with Sonoma. The update experience got refactored about a year and a half ago.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    14 months ago

                    The latest OS for that particular MacBook was Big Sur. Not sure if that’s before or after Sonoma. It was previously on 10.10 or something, whatever that is.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        Was thinking that too, although there are some caveats, you need to at least log into the store to download apps as it stands right now. I think you can log out after installing them, but still. Also using FaceTime or iMessage require accounts, when Apple otherwise could have it set up to just register with the phone number only, have no account, and just be ephemeral to that specific device. (But then at that point, they might as well just follow the IMS video call standard that is cross-platform and do away with FaceTime altogether, and the mobile industry should figure out the SMS replacement to then eliminate iMessage.)

    • @[email protected]
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      74 months ago

      Forced bundling of their preferred apps like a browser was what triggered the Microsoft anti trust, this is well overdue and Apple should have known it was coming

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        I mean MS has gotten away with exactly that, and so much more since then. The modern government hardly ever gives a shit anymore. So I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple totally expected to get away with it in perpetuity, and I won’t be surprised if they walk away from this unscathed because they filled the right pockets.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        No one said it’s a monopoly, and they’re not a monopoly, in the strictest sense, but:

        1. It doesn’t have to be a monopoly to violate anti-trust laws.
        2. Apple has an enormous market share of national and global OSs
        3. It’s a Duopoly, since there is really only 1 other legitimate competitor for the OS.

        And while I agree no one should buy Apple products, people continue to do so and that doesn’t mean they deserve to be forced into these arbitrary anti-competitive restrictions that benefit Apple exclusively, to the tune of tens of billions of dollars.