> Apple will work closely with leading payment platforms and app developers across the payments and commerce industry to offer Tap to Pay on iPhone to millions of merchants in the US.
Is it just me feeling that Apple is again playing gatekeeper to iPhone APIs and hindering true competition by "working with leading platforms" aka. the big players, like Stripe or PayPal, essentially leaving startups and smaller players disadvantaged.
They do that when they're concerned about bad actors or want to prove out the API first with a controlled set of people who are willing to experience breakage
They do that when they're concerned about bad actors or want to prove out the API first with a controlled set of people who are willing to experience breakage
Not only must you be reviewed by the App Store, but your app will require security entitlements to act as a payment processor. And you'll have to be a registered Apple developer in good standing.
If a malicious actor went through all this trouble to grab some transactions, they'd be shutdown within hours of the scam and Apple would refund the money.
Also, who's going to trust or want to use "Bob's rando payment processor"? No merchant is going to do that.
App store review can only catch so much, and isn't able to analyze the actual code. It's one way for them to gate malicious code.
And providing extra approval process for the NFC API is exactly what they're doing here.
AirTags actually have a lot of design in them to thwart bad actors so your comment there is incorrect or ignoring all the anti stalker measures in there.
Is it just me feeling that Apple is again playing gatekeeper to iPhone APIs and hindering true competition by "working with leading platforms" aka. the big players, like Stripe or PayPal, essentially leaving startups and smaller players disadvantaged.
Why not just finally open the NFC API?