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[return to "Web Environment Integrity API Proposal"]
1. quenix+Wg[view] [source] 2023-07-21 19:26:32
>>reacto+(OP)
What's strange to me is that the main author of the spec -- Ben Wiser -- seems to be against closed, wall-garden paradigms as he has written in a blog post "I just spent £700 to have my own app on my iPhone" [1]. In the post, he laments the state of the App Store monopoly on iOS and ponders returning to Android for the app installation freedom.

How can he reconciliate these views with this spec, which he is the main author of? Surely Ben sees the parallels?

He writes: "Apple’s strategy with this is obvious, and it clearly works, but it still greatly upsets me that I couldn’t just build an app with my linux laptop. If I want the app to persist for longer than a month, and to make it easy for friends to install, I had to pay $99 for a developer account. Come on Apple, I know you want people to use the app story but this is just a little cruel. I basically have to pay $99 a year now just to keep using my little app."

It's honestly comical and a little sad.

[1]: http://benwiser.com/blog/I-just-spent-%C2%A3700-to-have-my-o...

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2. troupo+yF[view] [source] 2023-07-21 21:14:36
>>quenix+Wg
> How can he reconciliate these views with this spec, which he is the main author of? Surely Ben sees the parallels?

It's easy: he works for Google. Every single public-ish web developer and/or devrel from Google will spend inordinate amounts of time lambasting Apple, writing eaassays on how Apple cripples the web etc.

While Google has broken the web so badly that Apple would need several decades to come anywhere close.

Note: the moment they leave Google, they may slightly change their tune and criticise Google a bit. For an example, see Alex Russel of web components when he went to work at Microsoft after spending a decade making sure that web browsers are turly unimplementable: https://infrequently.org/2021/07/hobsons-browser/

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3. saagar+8l1[view] [source] 2023-07-22 02:05:05
>>troupo+yF
The ones that do this are sadly the ones that end up being public.
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