• Eggyhead
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    101 year ago

    If Apple’s iMessage does fall under the DMA ruleset, it means Apple will be required to open iMessage to third-party operators.

    What does this look like in practice?

    • @Mon0
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      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

      • @teolan
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        11 year ago

        It will just force them to document and open up their APIs and protocols.

        • @Mon0
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          31 year ago

          deleted by creator

          • @orrk
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            51 year ago

            all of this stuff is just API calls anyway, that’s how the internet operates, none of this is done via an analogue signal transfer

    • @dustyData
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      31 year ago

      It could mean they make iMessage compatible with RCS for fucking once. Which would actually be a good thing for all Apple users.

      • @[email protected]
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        -11 year ago

        How will it be a good thing for all Apple users since Apple users use iMessage and don’t give a crap about SMS or RCS?

        Maybe it it was someone else besides google pushing RCS it might have a better adoption rate. But by this time next year google will have moved to another message app.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          You’re absolutely right, but the knuckle-draggers are too busy with their FOMO to hear it.

          iMessage supports a dense layer of features in excess of what’s possible with the RCS standard. RCS is a decent fallback, and maybe progress could be made towards supporting it as a fallback. But the issue is that not even all Android phones enable RCS by default, meaning iMessage would have to have a fallback and a second fallback.

          And honestly, the bottom line is that Apple is unlikely to prioritize implementing RCS until their customer base is asking them to do so, which they largely aren’t. The vast majority of the anger towards Apple regarding RCS is from people who don’t buy Apple phones, or from Apple’s direct competitors seeking to improve their products. Apple users (myself included) don’t really care because a marginally better SMS experience is still going to be worse than iMessage, and if I’m really looking for rich cross-platform messaging, I can use any of the dozen widely-used apps that do exactly that.

    • @TenderfootGungi
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      21 year ago

      They turn off iMessage in Europe. Or have argue it’s ability to fall back to SMS meets this. Or the industry invents a protocol that they all use and iMessage gets a new colored bubble.

    • kirklennon
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      -51 year ago

      What does this look like in practice?

      An endless sea of spam that Apple is legally required to deliver.