this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2025
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I mean Facebook specifically. It's shit at everything.
Yeah, because my point is that there's no difference between a super-app and a tightly integrated phone OS or set of apps for these kinds of things.
Are they working on that law right now? What has changed recently that makes that more likely than 5-10 years ago?
Interpreting that as requiring open APIs, obviously more open APIs would very much help with that kind of integration, but right now it seems like it's all based on the creator of the ecosystem (Apple, Google, Tencent, Alibaba) working with individual establishments or more specific apps to offer as much as possible. I'm sure restaurants have a similar process to get fully integrated in Apple or Google Maps as they do to get fully integrated into WeChat or Alipay. The main difference I can see there is the number of restaurants working with those ecosystems, which has nothing to do with whether the ecosystem is a super-app or a set of apps built into an OS.
Interpreting it as requiring restaurants and such to work specifically with WeChat and/or Alipay, that just sounds like granting a legal monopoly/duopoly to those couple of companies. If it were state run that might be great, but Tencent and Alibaba aren't state run.
Oh look, the debate style of quoting things line by line and blasting out a paragraph for each thing. How embarrassing for you. Cope harder, westoid.
Wow I replied to points in a structured manner, how cringe. I had a lot to say on a topic I'm interested in, how embarrassing. I guess my neurodivergence is showing, I'll try to hide it for you.
Disengage.
You aren't surprised.
Yes the liberal structure of Reddit.
It is, in fact.
A lot of liberal bullshit.
Try taking interest in it from a leftist perspective.
Quite.
I'm neurodivergent, too. Half the people on this website are.
You won't and you know it.
Feel free.