As far as I can tell this basically means that all apps must be approved by Apple to follow their “platform policies for security and privacy” even if publishing on a third party app store. They will also disable updating apps from third party app stores if you stay outside the EU for too long (even if you are a citizen of an EU country, with an Apple account set to the EU region).

The idea that preventing app updates is in line with their claims of protecting security is utterly absurd. “Never attibute to malice what can be explained with stupidity,” but Apple isn’t stupid.

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102 points

“Never attibute to malice what can be explained with stupidity,”

With corporations I feel like the opposite should apply.

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16 points

The corporation doesn’t love you, nor does it hate you. But you possess economic value, which could be made to belong to the corporation’s shareholders.

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72 points

For corporations it is, “Never attribute to malice what can be explained by greed.”

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14 points

For a lot of corporations, malice and greed are pretty much the same thing. When a business decision is justified by “Who cares? Do it anyway.” the distinction is a matter of words, not actions.

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1 point

It’s not malice though, it’s cold, unfeeling greed. Malice implies they want to cause harm; all they want is to extract maximum profit. Sometimes it’s by being malicious, sometimes it’s by being altruistic, for instance pretending to care about an oppressed minority in order to improve their image. The only decision is “will the cost of this action be less than the profit it makes?”

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24 points

Hate that phrase. Great way to excuse malice.

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18 points
*

There is an ‘adequately’ missing. It somewhat counters the excuse of malice.

If you can’t adequately attribute it to stupidity it has to be malice (or at least negligence).

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6 points

Yeah, that’s the more thorough version. My interpretation of the quote was to first search for stupidity, if only to confirm it is not in fact stupidity (but malice).

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7 points

A lot of people don’t like to think about just how much malice is involved in everyday life.

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3 points

Not so much, it’s more about how desperately stupid people (and companies) can be

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