A few days ago, Epic Games filed a lawsuit against Apple, challenging the idea that the Apple App Store--with its high fees and limitation on promotion of anything that isn't an Apple product or payment mechanism--is the only way to distribute apps on iOS. https://cdn2.unrealengine.com/apple-complaint-734589783.pdf
To anyone who responds "Apple isn't a monopoly": the actual test of "monopolization" is merely having a "significant and durable market power", not a 100% share; anti-competitive behaviors--such as "tying" and "refusal to deal"--can clearly apply to Apple. https://www.ftc.gov/tips-advice/competition-guidance/guide-antitrust-laws/single-firm-conduct
On the "they should also be arguing with console manufacturers" front: we shouldn't forget that Epic has *also* fought back against ridiculous policies from Sony (which dominates the console market), and managed to force their hands on cross-platform play. https://onezero.medium.com/how-fortnite-became-powerful-enough-to-break-sony-d6a4e4dcdb65
And to the "Apple is a great curator" idea: if you truly pay attention, it is a mixed and dangerous bag; *no entity* should have this much power; check out this talk I gave at Mozilla Privacy Lab for numerous examples of the dangers of centralized systems.
(While I am on that subject, I'm going to note my own, personal grudge: that Apple's centralized curation makes them a centralized point of failure subject to being a tool of totalitarian governments; I really loved @gruber finally calling them out on it.) https://daringfireball.net/2017/07/apple_china_vpn_apps
(By setting themselves up as the centralized curation point of applications on all of their hardware, Apple has enabled countries like China to trivially ban the existence of any software they want, whether it be VPNs or applications to organize protests.) https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/9/20907228/apple-quartz-app-store-china-removal-hong-kong-protests-censorship
(Oh, and before anyone tries to claim you can sideload applications using Apple's "free development" profiles, they have consistently worked to limit and cripple these mechanisms; in particular, you can't use this to sideload "network extensions", so Apple can entirely ban VPNs.)
(Meanwhile, Apple's insistence on getting "their cut" of all sales made on their hardware is fundamentally incompatible with a future of decentralized applications and anonymous money: the supposedly "pro-privacy" Apple has gone to war with these efforts.) https://twitter.com/brian_armstrong/status/1294076843616698368
In its most recent complaint, Apple continues to insist that @Pwn20wnd's usage of Corellium's product to help test and more rapidly develop the Unc0ver jailbreak for iOS 12 was an "unlawful end", entirely ignoring the USC Section 1201(f) interop exemption. https://twitter.com/Pwn20wnd/status/1112795882418634752
It is ridiculous that Apple insists "good-faith security research" "requires" "responsible disclosure"--a specific model that involves release deadlines--when Apple actually disallows security researchers in their program from using responsible disclosure! https://twitter.com/benhawkes/status/1286021329246801921
(This is a place where I take particular issue: I know many people who believe in "responsible disclosure" and I work with many *more* people who believe in "full/simultaneous disclosure"; but I don't actually know any security researchers who consider Apple's model to be moral.)
Apple continues to insist they have "never pursued legal action against a security researcher"... but they *have* used the DMCA to take down research and even mere discussion of their platforms; the EFF once had to *file a lawsuit* to get them to back off! https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/07/apple-backs-down-blu
When @i0n1c built a tool to detect malware installed on iOS devices, his application was pulled from the App Store; in a post, he noted Apple's notice "basically says: we do not want our users to have the impression iOS could have security holes. go away". https://fortune.com/2016/05/17/apple-iphone-hacked-app/
The reality is that Apple has been so hostile to independent security research that they've lost their edge: exploits for Android now cost more than exploits for iOS, a reversal experts generally credit to Google correctly allowing researchers open access. https://www.wired.com/story/android-zero-day-more-than-ios-zerodium/
Companies which wish to speak at security events should be required to sign a non-action pledge on USC Section 1201--which isn't even about infringement: it is a potentially-unconstitutional law about "circumventing" controls and "trafficking" in tools--in order to submit a talk.
So yeah: I don't know if anyone else will agree with me that security events should not allow companies using USC Section 1201--or similar laws around the world: the US got this included in a WIPO treaty--to speak at their events, but if so: poke a conference organizer for me? ;P
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