Apple's Security Claims Don't Hold Water Against Antitrust Suit
Briefly

The Department of Justice accuses Apple of neutralizing 'competitive threats by imposing a series of shapeshifting rules and restrictions in its App Store guidelines and developer agreements.'
Protecting user privacy and security is more feasible than corporations claim, and openness, privacy, and security are not incompatible values.
Apple's centralized and controlled ecosystem, seen since the 1980s, contrasts with Microsoft's more open approach to third-party application development.
Apple's decision to have a closed ecosystem for app downloads with the iPhone's launch insulated the company from competition, leading to a dominant market share.
Read at The American Conservative
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