I don’t subscribe to Bloomberg, but I can only assume he’s talking about it there, too, if tweets don’t count.
Moral of the story: Don’t tell (or even imply) to one of the most powerful companies in the world that you don’t intend to abide by an upcoming rule change, even if you’re certain you’re right.
Thankfully, Apple’s crap proposal is still just a proposal.
The tweet didn’t make any sense to me since it didn’t seem like a developer whining about your policies was ban worthy. It sounds like Epic hadn’t actually broken any rules yet.
EU regulators must feel like they’re babysitting two spoiled brats.
points to the tweets pictured
I don’t subscribe to Bloomberg, but I can only assume he’s talking about it there, too, if tweets don’t count.
Moral of the story: Don’t tell (or even imply) to one of the most powerful companies in the world that you don’t intend to abide by an upcoming rule change, even if you’re certain you’re right.
Thankfully, Apple’s crap proposal is still just a proposal.
The tweet didn’t make any sense to me since it didn’t seem like a developer whining about your policies was ban worthy. It sounds like Epic hadn’t actually broken any rules yet.
EU regulators must feel like they’re babysitting two spoiled brats.
We are in complete agreement there.
Calling apple’s response in the EU “hot garbage” does not equate to “we are not following your rules” unless I am missing something