EU continues pioneering new digital legislation called DMA, which is aimed big guys in tech to open up their platforms for more choice.
Do you think it can become successful, or blatant?
EU continues pioneering new digital legislation called DMA, which is aimed at big guys in tech to open up their platforms for more choice.
It sounds like a good idea, but the biggest issue I've seen are app stores - owning a proprietary app store and charging admission for 3rd party apps, as well as forcing all recurring revenue to go through the store is monopoly power - and we have laws against that kind of thing.
EU continues pioneering new digital legislation called DMA, which is at big guys in tech to open up their platforms for more choice.
It sounds like a good idea, but the biggest issue I've seen are app
stores - owning a proprietary app store and charging admission for 3rd party apps, as well as forcing all recurring revenue to go through the store is monopoly power - and we have laws against that kind of thing.
---
(though I like not
being restricted to only installing software available from an app
store).
I also think that the monopolistic definition here is not about there are alternative complete platforms (device + os + distribution) but narrowed only that if I select your device (APPLE) then I cannot freely choose where I buy apps and services from and I can't negotiate fees). That's still monopole... in the app distribution field on a single platform.
Sysop: | Gary Ailes |
---|---|
Location: | Pittsburgh, PA |
Users: | 132 |
Nodes: | 5 (0 / 5) |
Uptime: | 109:09:34 |
Calls: | 733 |
Files: | 2,171 |
Messages: | 81,483 |