Comment by _aavaa_
2 years ago
This argument leads nowhere since it just as well applies the other way around.
Both are problems, both need solving.
2 years ago
This argument leads nowhere since it just as well applies the other way around.
Both are problems, both need solving.
no?
removing/decreasing apples ability to police apps before regulation means you are opening users to hostile apps.
adding regulation and setting standards for apps and data tracking and then removing/limiting apples ability to police apps does not.
these are not the same thing?
Where are all these hostile apps on Android? Even the Facebook example, last I checked it's still on the Google's App Store.
Cause there's plenty of examples of Apple's store filled with spam and outright fraudulent phishing apps. There's a big difference between the image Apple advertises for the App Store and what it's actually like.
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