top | item 40302550

(no title)

whatisyour | 1 year ago

The implicit assumption that Apple Pay is more secure is the problem here. If it is really about security or cohesive experience, then Apple should have a transparent process for approving "secure" payment methods for any vendors and allow the user to set any arbitrary default payment method in the cohesive style while putting other methods (especially Apply Pay for example in the non-cohesive style).

discuss

order

vlovich123|1 year ago

A cohesive experience is more than just the UI skin. It’s also about the expectation that the payments work. If every app starts pushing users to install their payment method, that’s no longer a cohesive experience and the success of the payment going through is dependent on 3p services.

Not saying Apple is wrong or right, but your response isn’t considering the actual end-to-end user experience that will result from it, which is the part that Apple does care about.

whatisyour|1 year ago

One solution here is: then we solve the next problem, that is: we enable a payment standard like India does with say UPI and enforce all apps to use that standard, and so all apps should be able to accept any payment method which enforces that standard.

But also, users who really care about end-to-end user experience will automatically prefer standard payment apps. So, then bad apps should automatically get weeded out.

Finally, it is possible I admit, that here, we have "What's good for an Apple user?" vs "What's good for long term goals of the system?". Because it is quite possible that the long-term cost that happens because of the monopolistic practices of Apple only impact poor users negatively, and not rich users. And therefore, the only argument that actually works is, "This is bad for the whole population in general in long term, because of the potential for abuse in future by a company."

In such a case of potential abuse, it is possible that the users would then look the government to help them out, possibly at huge cost to the government. So, it might make financial sense on the part of the government to prevent such a situation from arising in the first place. And then, the real solution to this problem would be to break up Apple the phone hardware company from Apple the iOS company from Apple the payments company.

colonwqbang|1 year ago

Well, isn't that the point? If you desire uniformity above all then a local monopoly is the best possible situation for you.

Competition requires diversity, there has to be different offerings which work in slightly different ways.

An app on your phone is "third party" from the perspective of Apple but from your perspective it is a first party. You are doing business with them, presumably because you wanted to.

luxuryballs|1 year ago

I don’t think it means Apple Pay is more secure compared to another payment method just that it could be easier to trick someone if you could emulate more aspects of the authentic experience.