Linked List: August 8, 2024

Benjamin Mayo, writing at 9to5Mac:

Following the EU ruling in June that said Apple’s App Store anti-steering policies are officially in breach of the Digital Markets Act, Apple is announcing changes. Specifically, these changes address the rules around app developers linking out to the web to inform users about alternative payment methods. [...]

If you are operating under the EU alternative business terms, the Core Technology Fee still applies on installs. Additionally, the fees are charged as follows:

  • Initial Acquisition Fee: 5%
  • Store Services Fee: 10% (reduced to 5% for members of the App Store Small Business Program, or a qualifying renewal of a subscription after one year)

If you are continuing to offer your app inside the App Store under the standard business terms, the Core Technology Fee does not apply (as it never did). But the associated link out commission fee rates are increased:

  • Initial Acquisition Fee: 5%
  • Store Services Fee: 20% (reduced to 7% for members of the App Store Small Business Program, or a qualifying renewal of a subscription after one year)

This results in a complicated matrix of eligibility and fee costs, that developers will need to carefully evaluate. The new terms are available now to review on Apple’s developer website, including an updated fee calculator.

“Complicated matrix of eligibility and fee costs” is an understatement. Understanding all of this seems like it requires a CPA. I’ve looked across social media and read a slew of posts about this news, and I haven’t found a single person saying anything other than this is a convoluted mess. I think that’s as much on the DMA as it is on Apple: a convoluted mess of a compliance plan for a convoluted mess of a law.

What many people want is for Apple to just give in, concede, and allow iOS apps in the EU to just collect payments however they want, in-app or through links to the web, freely. Where by freely I mean free-of-charge freely. No CTF for downloads, no tracking of purchases made after users tap a link in the app to the web. What Apple wants is to continue making bank from every purchase on digital goods from an iOS app. We’re left with a mess where no one is happy with the result.

See also:

‘A Platform That’s Teetering on the Edge of Becoming a User-Experience Joke Akin to Windows Vista’ 

Jason Snell, “Apple’s Permissions Features Are Out of Balance”:

Some users will make bad decisions. That’s just reality. The wrong reaction is to take the decision out of every user’s hands to protect the ones who might do something stupid. Apple needs to find that balance, that protects people but gives users freedom to do what they want, however dangerous it might be.

Apple’s recent feature changes suggest a value system that’s wildly out of balance, preferring to warn (and control) users no matter how damaging it is to the overall user experience. Maybe the people in charge should be forced to sit down and watch that Apple ad that mocks Windows Vista. Vista’s security prompts existed for good reasons — but they were a user disaster. The Apple of that era knew it. I’d guess a lot of people inside today’s Apple know it, too — but they clearly are unable to win the arguments when it matters.

Never would have guessed I’d still find use for the “Windows Vista” tag in my CMS in 2024, but here we are.

Find Any File 2.5 

Developer Thomas Tempelmann just released version 2.5 of Find Any File, his file search utility for the Mac. Find Any File (FAF) has long been my go-to tool for file search. Why use FAF instead of Spotlight? Some feature highlights:

  • FAF can find files that Spotlight doesn’t, e.g. on network (NAS) and other external volumes, hidden ones inside bundles and packages, and those in folders that are usually excluded from Spotlight search, such as the System and Library folders. It can even search in other user’s folders if you use FAF’s unique root search mode.
  • FAF lets you search precisely for many file properties such as name, extension, date range, size, kind etc. [...]
  • FAF can also find textual content in plain text, in zip (including Word and Excel files) and even in most binary files. And with the option to include Spotlight results, it can also find text in PDF documents as long as they were indexed by Spotlight.

Amongst other features, FAF supports regular expressions, and you can save frequently-used searches to easily re-run them. There are several other good file search utilities for MacOS — and Tempelmann himself kindly offers a list of them — but FAF is my favorite. Free to download and try, and $6 shareware if you keep it. (Or buy it for $8 from the Mac App Store.)