47 comments

  • hirsin an hour ago

    The apparent information gathering and brutal review process is unbelievable here. If I'm understanding this correctly, the requirement is that eg Epic Game Store must register and upload every single APK for every app they offer, and cannot offer it in their store until Google approves it, which may take a week or more - including every time the app updates.

    Meanwhile they get full competitive insight into which apps are being added to Epics store, their download rates apparently, and they even get the APKs to boot, potentially making it easier for those app devs to onboard if they like, and can pressure them to do so by dragging their feet on that review process.

    > Provide direct, publicly accessible customer support to end users through readily accessible communication channels.

    This is an interesting requirement. I want to see someone provide the same level of support that Google does to see if it draws a ban.

      modeless 12 minutes ago

      This page only applies to apps distributed by Google Play. Not apps installed by third party stores. It's still outrageous, of course.

      gessha 29 minutes ago

      Google and accessible customer support should not be put in the same sentence. Their history of automated neglect is beyond reproach.

        yalok 22 minutes ago

        their Play store review practices are such a joke. Apps review is a completely obscure process, no clear way to see that the app is in review state, if they reject - amount of information why it was rejected is minimal and you have to second-guess; appealing is not trivial; most of the reviews are done by AI which gets triggered in totally random places from time to time (e.g., in my case, some pictures which looked fine for kids for years and went through many previous reviewed, suddenly seem too violent).

  • cmcaleer an hour ago

    > The following fees apply when a user completes [...] any app installs within 24 hours of following an external content link

    So does this mean a malicious competitor or motivated disgruntled user could fraudulently cause millions of app installs? With the scale smartphone activity fraud farms are at these days, paying a few thousand dollars on such a service to cause a developer to spend a few million dollars on worthless installs (or a lot of resources arguing with Google) seems like a worthwhile endeavour for the motivated.

  • grishka 9 minutes ago

    I feel like many commenters are misunderstanding what this is about. This is about apps that are distributed via Google Play. It's an exception to the long-standing rules that a) all monetary transactions for non-physical items must use IAPs, and b) a Google Play distributed app can't install or ask the user to install something from outside of Google Play.

    As far as I can tell, none of this applies to apps installed from elsewhere, be that F-Droid, other stores like RuStore, or just a downloaded apk. As long as the alternative store itself wasn't installed from Google Play that is, but none of them work like that anyway.

    I'm not defending Google of course. Their entitlement is still insane.

  • BrenBarn 16 minutes ago

    The fact that this is being introduced after the whole Epic/Apple thing clearly shows that the penalties in that case were not nearly severe enough and the standards set were not nearly stringent enough. The mere attempt to engage in policies like this should result in fines in the hundreds of billions.

  • dagmx 2 hours ago

    I’m very curious how Tim Sweeney will react to this. This is very much not the victory lap he was hoping to take (nor are the Apple rulings)

    1. I think uptake of third party stores is quite low and there’s a strong incentive to stay available on the primary store

    2. The App Store model has very much been that the paid apps are subsidizing the free ones. So it’s somewhat fair to charge for using the infrastructure, if you’re not contributing into the pot (and are siphoning away from it)

    3. Those per install costs are brutal. I was thinking they’d do a dollar , but at almost $4, they’re outside what most people would spend. This is a strong way to keep F2P games from instituting external payment processing.

      lobito25 2 hours ago

      Developers pay Google to access its services. Infrastructure costs account for less than 1% of the profit margin and are practically negligible. Google acts like a pimp, obsessed with squeezing profit above all else.

        musicale an hour ago

        If Google allowed other App stores on Android then maybe Amazon could make one. Or maybe they could add a setting to allow users to install their own APKs somehow.

          bloppe 24 minutes ago

          You can install your own APK already. It's only slightly inconvenient. But apparently that's inconvenient enough to get zero business.

        serial_dev 31 minutes ago

        Developers pay protection money to Google to access their users.

      radley 36 minutes ago

      > I’m very curious how Tim Sweeney will react to this.

      “Epic has indicated that it opposes the service fees that Google announced it may implement in the future and that Epic will challenge these fees if they come into effect.”

      https://www.theverge.com/news/848540/google-app-fees-externa...

      mrcwinn 2 hours ago

      Poor Tim! Hey anyone know if I'm allowed to put my own skin store inside the Fortnite store? It's only fair.

        hshdhdhj4444 2 hours ago

        People keep making the comparison between the Apple App Store or the Google Play store and the XBox store or the Fortnite store.

        But these are likely irrelevant comparisons.

        For one thing, the degree of monopolization simply doesn’t exist. Gaming is a market. There are many gaming platforms that are extremely popular. Xbox, PS, Nintendo, Steam, and then just open distribution on PCs which essentially means there is no lock in in this industry. And unlike the “web app” comparison folks try to make, open distribution can easily leverage the same capabilities as the store distributed games can (and in fact, they are more capable than games from some stores, like the Windows store).

        But more importantly, gaming isn’t an essential part of life, which is basically what smartphones, dominated entirely by iOS/Android, have become at this point.

        People depend on these platforms. There are businesses you cannot interact with if not through your phone. There are public transportation systems that are almost unusable.

        And finally, maybe this is just me, but I think the idea that general purpose computing is the same as playing video games just strikes me as wrong. General purpose computing, which is what phones are, are basic infrastructure for modern life. They should be treated differently and we shoudoht allow 2 companies to monopolize and/or embargo them like Apple/Google are trying.

          musicale an hour ago

          It's really too bad that essential public services can't be hosted on the web so that you could use them on any platform - smartphone, laptop, tablet, whatever - and would have an alternative to Apple and Google's game stores. Basic apps don't need fancy 3D graphics (and even if they did we have webGL etc.)

          raw_anon_1111 39 minutes ago

          And the business you need to interact with through your phone and government services are not going through in app payments and giving Apple a cut. At most they are accepting Apple Pay and being charged standard credit card fees

          Cry me a river for the Epics of the world selling loot boxes and other pay to win crap. It came out in the trial that 90% of App Store revenue is coming from games.

          Neither Epic, Google or Apple are on the side of the angels

          Razengan 33 minutes ago

          Oh my god these dumb excuses to ignore some things and then only target other things for the exact fucking reasons.

          Either stick to your laws and principles and apply them to everything equally or fuck off

          If phones have to be open so should consoles

          If the App Store and Google Play have to be open so should the content stores for Fortnite etc. (just like DotA did)

          8note 2 hours ago

          in terms of relevance, i think its anticompetitive that i cant use my skins and cosmetics from one game in a different game.

          if everything is running on the same couple engines, the cosmetics are all compatible with each other

            deaux 2 hours ago

            This comparison doesn't work at all. An APK for app A is compatible with Android devices of version X, regardless of the store it is sold on. A cosmetic for game B is not compatible with all games running on the same engine Y, for obvious reasons.

            Asking Fortnite to accept other stores selling Fortnite-compatible cosmetics doesn't work either because Fortnite has not monopolized a trillion-dollar industry, meanwhile spending billions on lobbying to make daily life for the average citizen impossible without them, which the Google-Apple cartel has. Fortnite has also never gained market share by pursuing claims about being an open source platform or not being evil, again unlike Google. These differences.. make all the difference. Call me when my kids are forced to agree to Fortnite EULAs to participate in schooling all around the world.

              pjmlp an hour ago

              They can come to Portugal, we don't do Chromebooks, or to most European countries for that matter.

              Unless all around the world is the usual "world === USA".

                deaux 13 minutes ago

                > Unless all around the world is the usual "world === USA".

                Not at all. US isn't even the leader on this. For example in many countries it's already much harder to do any kind of digital banking without a Google/Apple-approved phone than in the US.

                In Europe as well, more and more places where it's completely the norm for schools and teachers to do all their communication through Facebook or Whatsapp. Sure those have web, but are arguably the worst of the three. Portugal nor most European countries are above this at all. If only they were. Look at all the national IDs rolled out, those too more and more mandatory Apple/Android 2FA.

                Will Portuguese teachers never downgrade any students who do all their homework on e.g. OpenOffice and it doesn't look nice on the teacher's MS Office? Doubt it.

            motoxpro an hour ago

            I've been saying the same thing about my netflix movies on spotify. The both have video and are both in the app store running on the same OS!

            bigyabai 2 hours ago

            ESRB would like a word with you.

  • nsagent 2 hours ago

    Hopefully this gets slapped down hard just like Apple recently did. Both Apple and Google want to continue business as usual despite the court rulings.

      dagmx 2 hours ago

      I think you’ve misread the Apple ruling. The appeals court has said they may charge some amount, just not the higher amount that was originally set.

      The costs provided here may very well fall into the acceptable boundaries for the courts.

        malfist an hour ago

        I don't see how you can argue with the courts that the bandwidth cost to serve a 100mb zip file is $4. That's beyond egregious

          hirsin 37 minutes ago

          They're not even serving the file. That cost is born by the external provider.

          The four dollars is for providing the platform that the user used to navigate to the link and download the zip file.

          That's a fun bit of argument from the owners of Chrome.

        kmeisthax 2 hours ago

        I honestly don't understand the court rulings regarding all of this. Like, "you need to allow someone to install your software for free" is easy to understand. And "you can ban software that doesn't pay you your chosen cut" is also straightforward (even though I'm a dirty OS Commie that wants that shit for free). Both of those follow clear-cut legal principles based in antitrust and intellectual property law (respectively).

        But it seems to me that the court is trying to enforce some kind of middle ground, which doesn't make sense. There's no legal principle one can use to curtail the power of an IP holder aside from mandating it be given away for free. Indeed, the whole idea of IP law is that the true value of the underlying property can only be realized if the property owner has the power of the state to force others to negotiate for it. Apple was told "you can charge for your IP" and said "well all our fee is actually licensing, except for the 3% we pay per transaction". The courts rejected this, so... I mean, what does Apple do now? Keep whittling down the fee until the court finds it reasonable? That can't possibly be good faith compliance (as if Apple has ever complied in good faith lol).

          JumpCrisscross an hour ago

          > the whole idea of IP law is that the true value of the underlying property can only be realized if the property owner has the power of the state to force others to negotiate for it

          You're describing property in general. Not just IP.

          > Apple was told "you can charge for your IP"

          It's a bit misleading to use quotes in this case, given you aren't quoting the court.

  • Groxx an hour ago

    From just this page it's rather unclear what triggers this... if an fdroid app that does not use any Play libraries has a purchaseable thing on another site, is that in scope? Do they need to add Play libraries to track it, or be smacked? If yes, it'd certainly explain their "developer verification" effort, as it's a way to enforce rent extraction.

  • modeless 14 minutes ago

    Wasn't Apple just slapped down for exactly this in court, for the second time? They're really both going to fight this to the bitter end kicking and screaming like toddlers, aren't they.

    https://www.courthousenews.com/ninth-circuit-confirms-contem...

  • 827a 2 minutes ago

    Google attempting to claim any percentage of revenue from an external transaction will never happen. I believe the current situation with the App Store is that Apple has been barred by US courts from attempting to charge a fee similar to this; though they still do in the EU. USG antitrust, especially in the current admin, hates Google, far more than Apple; this structure will never survive being challenged.

    Charging a reasonable fee for the installation of an app can be, IMO, a fair and reasonably cost-correlative way for app store providers to be compensated for what few services they do provide application developers. That's within an order of magnitude of how much bandwidth would cost, if they were paying market cloud rates, and certainly there are other services rendered, like search indexing.

    I would emphasize to the people at Google, however, that your customers bought the phone, which came with the operating system, and thus ethically the core technology your application developers depend on has already been paid for. In Google's case, this happens through Samsung/etc's Android licensing; a relationship which landed them on the wrong side of antitrust lawsuits in the US quicker than Apple's racket did. They dip further by charging developers a direct fee to publish on their stores ($100/year for Apple, $25/one time for Google). Attempting to triple-dip by "reflecting the value provided by Android and Play and support our continued investments across Android and Play" convinces exactly no one of your benign intent; not your investors, nor the US Government, nor consumers, nor developers. The only person who may be convinced that any of this makes any sense is some nameless VP somewhere in some nameless org at your mothership, who can pat themselves on the back and say "at least its legal's problem now". Its possible no one at all in this business unit remembers what the words "produce value" even mean, let alone have the remote understanding of what it takes to do so. Exactly everyone who has ever interacted with it know this; your CEO certainly knows this, given how much investment he's made into AI and not into the Play Store. Continuing to cause so many global legal problems, for such an unpromising, growth-stunted business unit, is not generally a good recipe for keeping your job or saving your people from layoffs.

  • systematizeD an hour ago

    Just do progressive tax like Valve do 30/25/20 or/ 15%

  • m463 an hour ago

    I'm wondering if there was a FSF or GNU "store" (all software $0), would there be costs?

      rbits 39 minutes ago

      So F-Droid?

  • 0xbadcafebee 2 hours ago

    Why is anyone still developing for these stagnant walled gardens?

      concinds an hour ago

      "anyone" is 2 groups:

      - indies who mostly don't care about the 15%

      - the huge corpos (Netflix, Spotify, Amazon, game studios) who want the 30% to be 0%. They're the only ones who cares about these disputes. Yawn.

        raw_anon_1111 32 minutes ago

        Spotify hasn’t allowed in ap purchases since 2013, Netflix hasn’t either for years. Amazon cut some type of deal with Apple where Amazon Prime Movies can be purchased in app via your Amazon account.

      dontdoxxme an hour ago

      Most users don’t see it that way.

      groundzeros2015 an hour ago

      Customers are willing to pay for software

        realusername 15 minutes ago

        Not really, I'll say the secret out loud on HN, build for B2B instead and you'll be where the money is.

        Unless you are building a gambling game app, it's not worth it to go to the duopoly, I've been there.

      umrashrf an hour ago

      why people keep buying android or google devices?

      Why don't they buy alternate devices without android or google?

  • ycombinatrix 44 minutes ago

    Doesn't this violate the court order?

  • lobito25 2 hours ago

    The extortionists are at it again

  • ChrisArchitect 33 minutes ago

    Meanwhile in Japan, Google Complying with Japan's Mobile Software Competition Act for more open app stores

    https://blog.google/around-the-globe/google-asia/complying-w...

    (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46315033)

  • heavyset_go an hour ago

    This is just egregious, Google can't be split up fast enough and antitrust laws need to be enforced.