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I'm curious about US Law - When Microsoft got shot for something far less 'anti-competitive', why is Apple totally getting away with this?
If you are given a choice of what platform you can work on, and they all have their own issues, it's still a choice. But if each company got together and conspired to keep all of their platforms anti-competitive so they don't hurt their other businesses, that's collusion and it's illegal.
[...]
Developers are incredibly important to any platform but if developers alone could create and sustain a platform, we'd all be using Linux on our desktops.
[...]
A platform is more than throwing an SDK against the proverbial wall of developers and hoping something sticks. A platform, above all, needs to be curated.
[...]
If Apple had given into the thundering chorus of critics goading it to "open up" the iTunes/iPod/iTMS trio to third parties (WMA) and license its own DRM (FairPlay), we'd surely not be looking at a company whose market cap has grown an additional $100 billion since then. Indeed, there'd likely be no iPhone to kvetch about today.
[...]
Some developers demand Apple try to communicate better, lest they assume the worst of the platform vendor. While that sounds plenty reasonable at face value, given the curatorial demands on the fledgling state of the App Store platform and Apple's overall reliance on product-plan secrecy, we shouldn't realistically expect Apple to "open up" anytime soon.
Resolved: Apple is right to curate the App Store
http://counternotions.com/2008/09/15/app-store/