• TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Yeah, I remember when I tried to run an app on Linux, and it popped up and said: “Oops, the developer of this app you downloaded from the web hasn’t paid $100/year in protection money for verification. Guess you’ll have to navigate into your settings and allow running unverified apps for no reason which normal users with poor tech literacy will find burdensome or scary (and have to look up if and how they can do this, because the only options presented on the popup are ‘Move to Trash’ or ‘Cancel’).”

    You don’t have to defend Apple’s obvious protection racket grift.


    Damn, maybe some people don’t know that none of this is hyperbole – or just really love denying reality and slurping down the dick of their favorite multitrillion-dollar corporation’s OS. You cannot claim it’s “just like Linux” when Apple steps in as a middleman to extort developers out of money. Below is what happens to your app when you don’t pay Apple a ransom of $99/year (that’s $100 for all intents and purposes, and I’m going to call it as much instead of playing along with the old-as-dirt ‘99’ psychological trick).

    Pop-up with the option to 'Move to Trash' or 'Cancel' which reads (with a large, triangular, yellow exclamation symbol indicating caution): "'Example App' cannot be opened because the developer cannot be verified. macOS cannot verify that this app is free from malware. Safari downloaded this file on October 23, 2020."

    • turtlesareneat@piefed.ca
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      1 hour ago

      You can certainly compile and run your own apps, you need to pay the developer fee if you want to distribute the software to other people’s Macs or iOS, or use advanced features like iCloud integration or push messages.