for me that's pretty much irrelevant. The deal has always been, since the launch of the App Store in 2007: you pay 30% commission. hundreds of thousands if not millions of developers clearly thought this was a good deal, otherwise we wouldn't have these millions of apps. Just a couple of billionaires are very vocal about how this is bad for consumers, but that's mostly ********. It's bad for billionaires who want more dollars to give their share holders. For consumers the App Store has been a net good:
• On place to find all apps
• A pretty secure place at that, no viruses, scams that do get through usually get blocked pretty quickly
• easy to ask for a refund (did it twice, as easy as clicking a button and writing why you want a refund)
• One place to see all your subscriptions and in the same place you can easily stop them
• ...
for small developers it's a net good too:
• easy to start, publish and market your app
• barely any piracy
That apple doesn't get compensation for macOS apps has been a historic thing. It's not that suddenly apple realized "iOS is huge, let's close it down!"; it become huge partly because of these restrictions. The App Store is part of the value proposition of the iPhone.