pull down to refresh

Credit for this amazing turn of events goes to Epic Games founders Tim Sweeney and Mark Rein, who did what no small developer like us could ever dream of doing: they spent over $100 million to sue Apple in court. And while the first round yielded very little progress, Apple's (possibly criminal) contempt of court is what ultimately delivered the resolution. Thanks to their fight for Fortnite, app developers everywhere are now allowed to link out of apps to their own web-based payment system in the US store (but, sadly, nowhere else yet).
This is all we ever wanted from Apple: to have a way to distribute our iPhone apps and keep the customer relationship by billing directly. The 30% toll gets all the attention, and it is ludicrously egregious, but to us, it's just as much about retaining that direct customer relationship, so we can help folks with refunds, so they don't tie their billing for a multi-platform email system to a single manufacturer.
33 sats \ 0 replies \ @KLT 21 May
Best email service I’ve used in a long time. Definitely worth checking out if you haven’t. The basecamp guys are top tier.
reply
Suck it, Apple
Also, never heard of Hey, but this looks interesting
reply
Apple has always been a big manufacturer, where everyone has to bow down to them. When they lost the right to repair, l think it sent them slowly on a downhill trajectory.
reply
And yet Apple continues to make this access difficult with exaggerated warnings about the dangers of paying outside of its platform.
I'm not a developer, but what Apple is doing with third-party stores is outrageous.
reply
What is HEY? I'm an iPhone user but, this is great
Thanks to their fight for Fortnite, app developers everywhere are now allowed to link out of apps to their own web-based payment system in the US store (but, sadly, nowhere else yet).
reply
Wondering why Apple would want to sell HEY, even though I've never heard of it before.
reply