Things like forcing Apple to allow other payment methods was championed, but imagine if your business is forced to let your customers pay someone else to use your system, and then you’re the one that had to handle all their complaints because they got scammed.
That is simply not case. Apple has extremely detailed list of payment methods they provide support over. And anything they do not support, they refer you to that payment provider or developer.
BrikoX@lemmy.zip 2 days ago
EU does flex its power a lot, but the only case I know where you can say they are overstepping their authority was the money borrowing on the EU level during COVID-19 pandemic. Since they have no power of taxation, EU might not be able to repay its debts if countries don’t voluntary repay or other countries cover those debts.
Do you have other examples where they breached their authority?
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 2 days ago
The EU should have had no ability to make Apple allow alternative app stores or have to accept alternate in-app payments. They should have no ability to force Microsoft to give new users a choice to use a competitors browser on startup. For example.
BrikoX@lemmy.zip 2 days ago
Whether they should or shoudn’t is a different question though. You said “overstepping their bounds” and “they’re doing things that everyone knows is authoritarian”. If they have authority to do that, it can’t be that.
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 1 day ago
Another example I just saw posted about right now:
x.com/globalaffairs/status/1955272637984211407
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 2 days ago
They just do whatever they want though, because there’s no one to pull them up.