Side load personal assistant.
General>Settings>change Siri to GPT
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Side load personal assistant.
General>Settings>change Siri to GPT
You choose to buy something or not. It's that simple.Where is hubris beyond your empty accusation? No one loses anything because no one is required to install anything outside of the App Store. As we already know from macOS, installing from outside sources is difficult, let alone unsigned code (which no "grandma" is able to do). Obviously it won't be made easier on iOS.
If any to-be-protected US citizen wants to do this, they have to import an EU model.
You are talking about it by distracting from what it really is. A stop to Apple forcing us to use the App Store to get apps, simple as that.
They can have their glorious App Store on it all they want, but others have a right, too. Apple has no right to hide apps from users, at least here in the EU. The digital world is also bigger than app "stores".
As an example, if you want to lock down macOS, you cannot do so without installing Little Snitch. Even if there was a MAS version, it could not do its job and protect the user.
Maybe you should open your eyes and read actual articles about developers getting their app reviews denied until they got media coverage documenting their cases. The whole app review system is flawed and has been from the start, and is only in place as moral police. It has no security check competences and only executes policy metrics.
Also, a customer is a human and hence human rights (and if you read carefully, I wrote customer human rights - but you intentionally removed that, didn't you?). Not global, but national (and in this case, EU-wide).
And again, no one is talking about anyone forcing a customer to buy something. We are talking about a company not being allowed to force people to endure illegal concepts on whatever they sell no matter if they are okay with it or not. I could enjoy getting my fingers chopped off, doesn't mean it should be allowed or considered cool just becuase TC likes it.
The device was not abiding laws or else MS would not have been forced to ease the access to other browser options besides IE. All the digital laws were created even before the App Store to prevent monpolistic nature, and Apple just went ahead with it and profited from the fact that people were unaware of its nature.
It is currently not legal, it is only a grace period for illegal products. Do your research.
And again, you are not the one to define what alternatives are for us. That is for each person to decide. My alternative and best possible product is iOS after being compliant under EU law, which has been bolstered to rule out any outlaws by closing any legal lapses that might give Apple room to argue that the App Store is something different here.
Factually, the apps which I sideloaded could not breathe on iOS before, so my comparison is sound.
I have the right to buy the product which abides to laws, and I do. Don't tell me to buy or not buy anything, it's my choice. Same as it's Apple's choice to abide and stay or not to abide and leave.
And I have the right to petition anything, same as Apple does. We have the right to kick companies out if they play foul. Apple did.
I don't have to believe anything. The numbers are in, and we voted for that both with our constitutional votes and representative action underscored with independent polls and statistics, and petitions from citizens independent from that.
People in the EU can be happy that the governments decided for the people and not for the company.
If people would just do as you suggest, we would not improve anything and would still make fire with rocks. Your example about Ukraine couldn't be more wrong because many would like to leave, but can't. Many would like to fight, but can't either. Many people have things and people to care for, which is a dependency. And it is a known fact that switching is hard as well, because of dependencies and barriers.
You can also quit your job to find a better one, or you can make yours better by fighting for worker rights. Apple themselves would have never raised their retail staff's salaries in I believe it was 2012/2013 unless it was made public and it shamed shareholders and the public, same with other things that happened to their workforce, like how they forced covid-infected people to come to work and then infected a whole team just to sell more iPhones, and hunting down the people who spoke publicly about it.
This is all about Apple's greed infringing on multiple affronts from health, fair salaries, competition & manipulation/monopolism, and more. Your liked company is nothing to be proud of or to admire.
So how do you justify owning many of their products? The goal is to contribute as less as possible to that consumerism, ideally zero. Apple has the choice to do it elsewhere, yet they opt not to because child labour is profitable. Your white knight in shining armor who is trying to sell you basically the same product every year anew.
If a business has a moral code, it is expected to follow it. If they don't, it's just empty PR.
You can follow down their supply chain with "recycling" partners like Brightstar.
The recycled material is stuff like aluminium from bent phones' back etc, which, if Apple didn't reuse for their own, the end of the trash/recycle chain would have recycled for someone else to reuse. Everything that can be recycled, will be recycled if people and companies follow the laws and put it in the right trash can.
Apple itself is not, but their implementation of the App Store on iOS is, because it's the only source for apps for the whole device, and developers and apps which don't fall into Apple's grace are locked out, independently from the user's intent to install them on their device. If it was a leased device, sure, but not okay for an owned one.
Whether that comparison is sound is for each recipient to decide, and for me, yours does not as Android vs iOS doesn't either. You can compare Linux distros with each other, and Android versions from different manufacturers.
And this competition will now also take place on iOS which will enable innovation.
It is easy. Grind as little as possible off the planet's limited resources and provide an as big as possible upgrade, and not this metered bean-counting mess. We don't need a new device with +1 incremental "upgrades" every year.
It's a normal law made by normal people following the normal wishes of normal people.
I would agree for the most part but the most vital software (on the Mac) is not even available on the MAS, such as Little Snitch. And software like DasiyDisk or Slack are less functional in their MAS versions. Plus, a lot of software also just gets removed, and some of them you can't even redownload even if you purchased them.Let’s be honest, this is about providing alternative app-store opportunities for companies that make apps who lose a lot of revenue to Apple’s 30% cut of gross app revenue. My bet would be Steam and Epic would be the first companies to open alternative app stores asking for a lower cut, aiming at Apple’s bulk of the App Store revenues made from gaming. Its fair and competitive, Apple’s walled garden is an unfair barrier to competition.
There will probably be other market segments where big players will try and get a slice of the pie. Porn, gambling (where it isn’t regulated), and so on. The base human desires. It will be a case of buyer beware.
Not sure how this simple concept cannot be computed by you, but again: An alternative is defined as an alternative not by you, but by everyone themselves. Or else, when you're in a critical condition, I could just donate you my blood type a when you're type b, since both types are blood.You choose to buy something or not. It's that simple.
People have choice. Your view of there not being another alternative is false.
You don't like Android, and that is fine. But, it is an option that already allows what the EU wants Apple to do.
So you make it up as you go along then. Whatever. It's an alternative to Android. Android is an alternative to iOS. You can pick/buy which you prefer. These are facts not opinions or some rubbish from Apple. If Apple did not exist in the EU at all, your only alternative is Android and there would be nothing you could say other than "We want Apple in the EU so we can belittle them!". I mean Apple is so good at banning apps they don't like. Why not ban a whole country or region of countries!Not sure how this simple concept cannot be computed by you, but again: An alternative is defined as an alternative not by you, but by everyone themselves. Or else, when you're in a critical condition, I could just donate you my blood type a when you're type b, since both types are blood.
If you look for alternatives for anything on the internet, different websites present you different alternatives because, surprise, they all have different opinions. Which is what you are calling an alternative is, just an opinion. So it is your view which is false, but you already know that, don't you? You're just here to do your job which is being in Apple's social media squad.
I think your employer is giving you instructions to talk it down because Apple doesn't want this law expanded to other markets, like the US.
It isn't, you have Android. And they can already bypass the 30%, its called WebApps.Let’s be honest, this is about providing alternative app-store opportunities for companies that make apps who lose a lot of revenue to Apple’s 30% cut of gross app revenue. My bet would be Steam and Epic would be the first companies to open alternative app stores asking for a lower cut, aiming at Apple’s bulk of the App Store revenues made from gaming. Its fair and competitive, Apple’s walled garden is an unfair barrier to competition.
These are areas Apple doesn't cater to/with/for. They don't want any association with it. Same as other companies in the world. If anyone needs to wants such things you have a web browser. They could create a web app, or you can use another device that just doesn't care one way or another about those types of apps.There will probably be other market segments where big players will try and get a slice of the pie. Porn, gambling (where it isn’t regulated), and so on. The base human desires. It will be a case of buyer beware.
Again. It's not an alternative just because you say so. It's just ignorant to hear another opinion and to move it to the side because it doesn't suit yours (or your employer's). Android is a different operating system, and what they have in common is that they are operating systems and work on mobile, true. But that does not make them alternatives to one another. I hope you don't have to work with people who have other opinions or else there might not be so many who would like to talk to you if you just sh**talk down on them.So you make it up as you go along then. Whatever. It's an alternative to Android. Android is an alternative to iOS. You can pick/buy which you prefer. These are facts not opinions or some rubbish from Apple.
Same again, you don't get to decide what is considered to be an alternative for people other than you. And here again, no one if forcing Apple or anyone else to offer their OS on any given hardware. But if they do, this OS needs to follow basic rules, and that includes users having the choice of where to download apps from. The manufacturer has no right to deny users their rights.The argument is still the same. Just like Microsoft is an alternative to MacOS and it an alternative to Linux. MacOS does not run on standard PC hardware (without hacking it). No one is forcing Apple to write it for the standard PC. No one is forcing Apple to support it on a standard PC. Nor is anyone forcing Microsoft to support M1/2 nor Linux.
Apple is not forced to do anything, unless they want to do things in someone else's domain. Then they gotta follow the laws. And starting this fall, they will if they want to continue grinding our economic zone. And I am not stuck with the monopoly anymore, as millions of other people. The monopoly was the App Store and it will only remain a monopoly outside of the EU.If Apple does not want to be compatible or to work with any developer or "store", they should not be forced to do so. You as a consumer picks the product that best suits you. If Apple's doesn't, you don't pick it. And in a world where there is another choice/alternative/option. You are not stuck picking the monopoly.
Another flawed example. You are talking about a shop inside a shop, this law is once again about the freedom to sell wares outside of another shop. If said shop wants to prevent that, there is an antitrust issue right there. We solved that and you are lagging behind.My bakery doesn't have the right to setup shop inside your grocery store which also sells baked goods(or not!). If the two stores doesn't want to. Nor is anyone forcing that to happen. If they choose to such as when Apple is operating a store within Best Buy, they don't have to by any rules or laws other than their own business choices.
You are a tryhard with your attempts to bring up the idea like we are forcing Apple to create content on any foreign platform, well we are not. We are just saying that if they want our money, they gotta remove the monopoly string of their OS which is the App Store, and let users choose their content by themselves. No work needed as sideloading already exists with enterprise certificates, which however make up for a lot of money.Can we force Microsoft to create more games for MacOS or iOS? Is that something that too can be regulated by governments? Can we force Sony to sell their exclusive games to their rival platforms? Or open up a store within Xbox and within Nintendo and any combination between them. So there is more competition and innovation? Oh that's right. You can purchase a disk at a local store and go round the built in store of each platform. Well on Apple's platform you can create a WebApp. And totally bypass the AppStore and it's easier than side loading. It's so easy it's scary, as if someone like Apple created it.
It's not an illusion. One person alone understanding why something is not an alternative is already enough to disqualify two products from being alternatives for one another. You would probably be this funny person in the family who, after two have divorced, suggests their divorcee to just go and marry the next personthey see because they match the gender of their old divorcee's and being single.Your illusion of no choice or alternative or option to Apple's platform is a complete fabrication (IMHO).
Here you go again, comparing apples to oranges. Web apps are websites, no native code. You are probably also confusing JavaScript with Java just becuase they sound alike, and are both programming languages.It isn't, you have Android. And they can already bypass the 30%, its called WebApps.
Do you have any idea how much resources it costs to write native code a second time just for another platform, and that platform not hosting the prime demographic of serious gamers? Yet you still have more AAA titles on the Mac than on iOS because, surprise, they can have Steam. They can have any other store. They can offer the download directly without any store interfering and stealing revenue. Apple's walled garden is a natural barrier to that.I ask, where is the hoard of games on macOS from these companies? You can install whatever you want (even malware if you so choose) on macOS. Yet all these developers can't seem to get on board with selling more games on the mac when they can do so much easier. As a macOS user I have to now own an Xbox, Playstation, Switch, and or a PC to get all the games I want access to. Apple's walled garden is not a barrier to anything. These developers just want it cheaper. That's it. Not even saying they don't have a right to want it cheaper. But let's not pretend your or my gaming life will be magically better if they saved anything of that 30% (full price cut, it can be lower). They still have to develop for it, and there still has to be a market for it enough to justify the investment/time/energy/whatever. EPIC wants to turn a profit just like Apple does.
So it's cool when apple takes customers choice away, got it.
Don't remember seeing any people pretend there's no risks.I think it’s about time people started acknowledging the risks involved with sideloading, rather than brush them off simply and pretending there are zero downsides whatsoever because they represent an inconvenient truth that does not support their argument any.
Not having the choice to install malware isn’t necessarily a bad thing in the larger scheme of things.
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Downloading apps from dubious sites that can lead to malware being installed onto victims’ mobile phones. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.www.straitstimes.com
iOS, by design, does not give its users enough rope to hang themselves with, and this is in line with what the judge in the epic trial ruled. That trading freedom (to sideload apps) in exchange for security and convenience constituted a reasonable trade off.
I think it’s about time people started acknowledging the risks involved with sideloading, rather than brush them off simply and pretending there are zero downsides whatsoever because they represent an inconvenient truth that does not support their argument any.
How is it not an alternative? They both run applications on a mobile device, make calls, send text messages, browse the internet, check email, take pictures, play music, play games...... Is macOS not an alternative to Windows, or Linux, or Unix?Again. It's not an alternative just because you say so. It's just ignorant to hear another opinion and to move it to the side because it doesn't suit yours (or your employer's). Android is a different operating system, and what they have in common is that they are operating systems and work on mobile, true. But that does not make them alternatives to one another. I hope you don't have to work with people who have other opinions or else there might not be so many who would like to talk to you if you just sh**talk down on them.
That's the rule for it being an alternative? The user having a choice to download apps from? You're hanging this whole argument of choice on the ability to download an app? So, for that here.. WebApp on iOS WORKS as an alternative means. Problem solved.Same again, you don't get to decide what is considered to be an alternative for people other than you. And here again, no one if forcing Apple or anyone else to offer their OS on any given hardware. But if they do, this OS needs to follow basic rules, and that includes users having the choice of where to download apps from. The manufacturer has no right to deny users their rights.
Agreed.Apple is not forced to do anything, unless they want to do things in someone else's domain. Then they gotta follow the laws.
Very glad we agree on timelines now.And starting this fall, they will if they want to continue grinding our economic zone.
A monopoly if you discount the WebApp route. A monopoly if you discount the fact that Android exists as an alternative to iOS, which also allows the things you want. And is the larger of the two mobile phone options in the EU.And I am not stuck with the monopoly anymore, as millions of other people. The monopoly was the App Store and it will only remain a monopoly outside of the EU.
You will have a product alright.We will have the better product because of choices.
Within the iPhone iOS platform. It's a shop within a shop.Another flawed example. You are talking about a shop inside a shop, this law is once again about the freedom to sell wares outside of another shop.
Solved what? You force other shops within shops? Remind me to not want to invest in the EU markets.If said shop wants to prevent that, there is an antitrust issue right there. We solved that and you are lagging behind.
Yes it is a shop. Apple & Best Buy allow each other to exist within the same store of Best Buy. They are not forced to exist within the same store.And you didn't even understand the BestBuy comparison because BestBuy is a shop, just like the App Store.
Ok so there is only the risk of fines and such. But not force.You are a tryhard with your attempts to bring up the idea like we are forcing Apple to create content on any foreign platform, well we are not.
With the risks associated with that.We are just saying that if they want our money, they gotta remove the monopoly string of their OS which is the App Store, and let users choose their content by themselves. No work needed as sideloading already exists with enterprise certificates, which however make up for a lot of money.
It's a means to the ends. And it works.And if you think a webapp is an app, you're solely mistaken. It's a simple website in a Safari wrapper with the sole difference that the UI elements are gone, and you get a little more MB cache with different cookie expiration dates.
Yeah right, it's so scary to unlock your phone and open Safari.
They could choose to or not. They could even pick another gender too. It's not like there was only one other person on planet earth they could hook up with. If the marriage wasn't working out with the first person. It's not like they can take out what they didn't like and or add more of what they do in the same person. Like adding a new store into Apples iPhone. You breakup, and move on. Or not.It's not an illusion. One person alone understanding why something is not an alternative is already enough to disqualify two products from being alternatives for one another. You would probably be this funny person in the family who, after two have divorced, suggests their divorcee to just go and marry the next personthey see because they match the gender of their old divorcee's and being single.
It was there from the start of the iPhone and exists today. Don't like it, buy and Android.Here you go again, comparing apples to oranges. Web apps are websites, no native code. You are probably also confusing JavaScript with Java just becuase they sound alike, and are both programming languages.
Don't make your problem my problem. There are plenty of cross platform games. It always has and always will depend on how much they can make developing those games for the other platforms. Or if they are exclusive or not. If EPIC can make one game on macOS and iOS they can certainly make all games they produce on it as well. Same goes for Microsoft or EA or Activision etc. They have the tools and the talent to do so. Is it worth the effort on the platform? Are there serious gamers on macOS or iOS?Do you have any idea how much resources it costs to write native code a second time just for another platform, and that platform not hosting the prime demographic of serious gamers?
I would tend to agree with this, but part of it is due to power of the device. iPhones are great, but it's a handled. Mac's are better. More GPU and CPU power. We on the mac still don't have MANY of the AAA games that the PC enjoys. But, if you streaming your games. Then you have full access to whatever those hosting companies provide.Yet you still have more AAA titles on the Mac than on iOS because, surprise, they can have Steam. They can have any other store. They can offer the download directly without any store interfering and stealing revenue. Apple's walled garden is a natural barrier to that.
Great, we understand each other. Again!Of course Epic wants to turn a profit here, if I were them I would want that, too.
And in doing so, I believe that judge let it be known that Apple wasn't monopoly.They played foul with going against the guidelines while acting like a stubborn child within the App Store premises, and paid for that in full.
That judge didn't agree with that statement either.However, Apple is playing foul with the OS itself, coming along with ever new excuses how the human would be in danger if they would be as free as on the Mac. Wake up, man. No one here believes your stuff. Maybe you're 1-2 coworkers who are also here to cover your shift.
An alternative is something where the sum of what you're looking for is matching. The sum is not matching nothing that you say will change it because we already found the conflicting areas where the mismatch exists.How is it not an alternative? They both run applications on a mobile device, make calls, send text messages, browse the internet, check email, take pictures, play music, play games...... Is macOS not an alternative to Windows, or Linux, or Unix?
Webapps do not work because it's a website, not an app. Or can you read your fancy local VPN traffic with your website or use hundreds of megabytes offline? Do you get push notifications?That's the rule for it being an alternative? The user having a choice to download apps from? You're hanging this whole argument of choice on the ability to download an app? So, for that here.. WebApp on iOS WORKS as an alternative means. Problem solved.
Webapp ist just a website. Android is no alternative because it's a wholly different operating system for different devices.A monopoly if you discount the WebApp route. A monopoly if you discount the fact that Android exists as an alternative to iOS, which also allows the things you want. And is the larger of the two mobile phone options in the EU.
This boils down to the EU not wanting to see a closed system that also makes more than a specified amount of money. Regardless if there are alternatives. Regardless if it is hurting or helping the consumer or developers. IF the EU said Ok these new rules come into affect if you make "more" than the current 2022 profits/sales within the EU. I might have been a little more OK with it. Still not fair in my view but, not totally forcing Apple's hand.
Your "solution" is another violation of EU law that enables competition and free choice amongst users and developers because you have one model that complies and one which doesn't. Just because you do some legal things doesn't mean that you're allowed to continue illegal practices.My solution would be that the EU allow Apple to continue to sell "AS IS" the current model. With a revenue cap of 2022 levels "unless" they either:
1) Open up the existing platform as currently described. Or face fines on revenue above 2022 level of say 50%. Not world wide revenue, but revenue within the EU only.
The only sacrifice to security is Apple's lax handling of zero-day exploits and their negligience of bug reports. Anything that Apple doesn't want executed on their OS, they can disallow on the OS level. Requires Apple however to shift resources from emojis to QA. I know, it hurts.Let Apple create a product that "suits" the EU, AND keep their existing alternative platform without sacrificing security on the existing and allowing open choice of app distribution and installation. Without charging them a fine on revenue the EU has no business with.
I have the same product except that it can do more if I wish so.You will have a product alright.
iOS is not a shop, don't act like it is. If you "uninstall" the App Store, have you uninstalled iOS?Within the iPhone iOS platform. It's a shop within a shop.
Apple will also not be fined not to create content. Are you high?Ok so there is only the risk of fines and such. But not force.
We already let democracy decide, which is better than markets because people's voice is more important than their wallet. This is about consumer rights and competition and everyone having the same access to it. Rich developers, poor developers. Rich citizens, poor citizens. Everyone.With the risks associated with that.
I would argue Apple got the money from the EU without having to do this in the first place. If they want "more" of it, then maybe produce a product that the EU wants of their own free will. Let the markets decide if the EU way is the way forward. Let Apple fail because more people in the EU have decided it's not the product for them. Either Apple adjusts or they fail within the region.
It does not work. Thousands of very baseline functions starting from notifications, seamless offline usage to native functions don't work. Which is also why iOS is such an embarrassing statement to things like coding.It's a means to the ends. And it works.
You already got the point but ignored it. You disrespect all what iOS is and can do. We already picked iOS and the only alternative to the current iOS is the next iOS, which is the same but with more capabilities.They could choose to or not. They could even pick another gender too. It's not like there was only one other person on planet earth they could hook up with. If the marriage wasn't working out with the first person. It's not like they can take out what they didn't like and or add more of what they do in the same person. Like adding a new store into Apples iPhone. You breakup, and move on. Or not.
We don't have to buy anything, we just wait until September. I will support the developers directly, I don't have to reward Apple for not listening to their users by putting some money in the App Store, hell no.It was there from the start of the iPhone and exists today. Don't like it, buy and Android.
It is not my problem, it is the problem of devs. As compared to you, I care for people putting work to it.Don't make your problem my problem. There are plenty of cross platform games. It always has and always will depend on how much they can make developing those games for the other platforms. Or if they are exclusive or not. If EPIC can make one game on macOS and iOS they can certainly make all games they produce on it as well. Same goes for Microsoft or EA or Activision etc. They have the tools and the talent to do so. Is it worth the effort on the platform? Are there serious gamers on macOS or iOS?
A lot of AAA games have been natively ported to iOS using the best Metal API practices from Feral interactive. There were games like Tropico, Total War, GRID, and more. Tropico didn't even run hot while a simple Angry Birds did. The hardware is capable enough.I would tend to agree with this, but part of it is due to power of the device. iPhones are great, but it's a handled. Mac's are better. More GPU and CPU power. We on the mac still don't have MANY of the AAA games that the PC enjoys. But, if you streaming your games. Then you have full access to whatever those hosting companies provide.
I never doubted that we do. The difference is you spreading propaganda about people not wanting that and it being bad for people to exercise their free will.Great, we understand each other. Again!
Apple has no monopoly in their own store, they do have one on the platform itself, which however is not the body of this legal battle. The legal battle was about Apple's behaviour in their own store, and Apple can do, for the most part, whatever they want in it. The judge said that a framework for how to behave outside of the App Store can be worked on, but it's different, and Epic has no way of winning in the lawsuit that they brought up because their misbehaviour is just what it is, a misbehaviour.And in doing so, I believe that judge let it be known that Apple wasn't monopoly.
Exactly what tax are you referring to? The fee paid by devs to Apple? Or that devs charge more to the end user to help offset the fee?Good news! No more Uncle's Sam tax on everything.
Nothing? Really nothing? Ok.An alternative is something where the sum of what you're looking for is matching. The sum is not matching nothing that you say will change it because we already found the conflicting areas where the mismatch exists.
They will in due time. They want the money from the market.THEY DIDNT DO IT!
They will in due time. They want the money from the market.
Yeah, Apple has no interest in promoting this even in the slightest, for sure.This is likely something that won't be seen till launch day.
Be surprising if we saw it in betas at all anywhere.
I can imagine they won’t even list it as a feature when it drops. It will just appear buried somewhere in the settings. The EU law doesn’t require making a song and dance about it!Yeah, Apple has no interest in promoting this even in the slightest, for sure.
The European Union's Digital Markets Act (DMA), which went into effect on November 1, 2022, requires "gatekeeper" companies to open up their services and platforms to other companies and developers.
I really like that idea as long as it's safe. I've been sideloading apps using my Mac for a long time. I'm not sure if it's gonna work for me because I live in the US
Apple in iOS 17 will for the first time allow iPhone users to download apps hosted outside of its official App Store, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.
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Otherwise known as sideloading, the change would allow customers to download apps without needing to use the App Store, which would mean developers wouldn't need to pay Apple's 15 to 30 percent fees.
The European Union's Digital Markets Act (DMA), which went into effect on November 1, 2022, requires "gatekeeper" companies to open up their services and platforms to other companies and developers.
The DMA will have a big impact on Apple's platforms, and it could result in Apple making major changes to the App Store, Messages, FaceTime, Siri, and more. Apple is planning to implement sideloading support to comply with the new European regulations by next year, according to Gurman.
Apple has claimed that sideloading will "undermine the privacy and security protections" that iPhone users rely on, leaving people vulnerable to malware, scams, data tracking, and other issues. However, Apple must comply with the DMA or it risks fines of as much as 20 percent of its global revenue if the EU laws are violated.
In a December 2022 report Gurman said Apple was considering implementing security requirements such as verification, a process that it could charge a fee for in lieu of collecting money from app sales. Apple has a verification system on Mac that allows users to be safe while giving them access to apps outside of the Mac App Store.
If other countries introduce similar legislation, alternate app stores could expand beyond the European Union. The United States, for example, is considering legislation that would require Apple to allow sideloading.
Article Link: iOS 17 to Support App Sideloading to Comply With European Regulations
I just want to be able to sideload Kodi without the 7 day expiry the device has right nowSideload as many apps that can profit off your life choices and social media interactions. The one upside I can see is to be able to sideload an AI that'll work better than Siri.