Apple, Twitter, Facebook Don't Owe You, Developer!
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Side 2
Side 2
Side 1 says...
I'm good friends with a guy who makes about half his income on an iPhone app he created. With all the changes Apple and these other companies like Twitter and Facebook on their open developer platforms, a lot of developers are starting or gonna start to feel the pinch as the bigger businesses begin to consolidate services and take away opportunity.
I for one believe in going to the gold rush that developer access has brought in application builds. But that's just what it is - a gold rush! What does a gold rush do? It ends eventually.
My biggest gripe over the people complaining about terms changes or whatnot is the fact that they created businesses solely on the back of other businesses. They completely disregard the business to which they are practically being parasitic. Sure, it's symbiotic at first. In return for the traffic each brings to the other, the app will most likely make money. But now, as the host business (i.e. Apple, Twitter, Facebook, etc.) wants to build revenue, they want to take back features built by third parties.
Kudos to them. Facebook alone allowed 500,000 developers to create 100s of thousands of apps to test effectiveness of a platform. Notice how many are still standing tall. Still get those FarmVille invites? Yeah, a single app on Facebook is bigger than all of Twitter! And valued at 3x Twitter!!
What Facebook did is allowed developers to make money in a gold rush. Now they will be merciless in their world domination by taking the strengths of all the successful applications (they are creating their own credit-based ecosystem just like FarmVille has for offers) while having the developers spend the millions of dollars they would have on testing. Talk about a R&D WIN.
THEY OWE THE DEVELOPERS NOTHING. Sure, through your channels you help spread the their service, but you've made your pay. Now it's their turn.
Twitter is rolling out Promoted Tweets. They bought Tweetie. Eventually they will take all the biggest third party features and either buy them or build them from within leaving the developer SOL. Same with Apple. They can accept or reject what they want. They created a way for YOU to make money. Without their platform, you wouldn't have had that opportunity.
I mean, my biggest question to the developers is did you not see this coming?
I for one believe in going to the gold rush that developer access has brought in application builds. But that's just what it is - a gold rush! What does a gold rush do? It ends eventually.
My biggest gripe over the people complaining about terms changes or whatnot is the fact that they created businesses solely on the back of other businesses. They completely disregard the business to which they are practically being parasitic. Sure, it's symbiotic at first. In return for the traffic each brings to the other, the app will most likely make money. But now, as the host business (i.e. Apple, Twitter, Facebook, etc.) wants to build revenue, they want to take back features built by third parties.
Kudos to them. Facebook alone allowed 500,000 developers to create 100s of thousands of apps to test effectiveness of a platform. Notice how many are still standing tall. Still get those FarmVille invites? Yeah, a single app on Facebook is bigger than all of Twitter! And valued at 3x Twitter!!
What Facebook did is allowed developers to make money in a gold rush. Now they will be merciless in their world domination by taking the strengths of all the successful applications (they are creating their own credit-based ecosystem just like FarmVille has for offers) while having the developers spend the millions of dollars they would have on testing. Talk about a R&D WIN.
THEY OWE THE DEVELOPERS NOTHING. Sure, through your channels you help spread the their service, but you've made your pay. Now it's their turn.
Twitter is rolling out Promoted Tweets. They bought Tweetie. Eventually they will take all the biggest third party features and either buy them or build them from within leaving the developer SOL. Same with Apple. They can accept or reject what they want. They created a way for YOU to make money. Without their platform, you wouldn't have had that opportunity.
I mean, my biggest question to the developers is did you not see this coming?
Added by owednothing (male)
Side 2 says...
We as developers give these services a much needed boost by spreading them in ways they either don't have the money for or just couldn't think of on their own. Sure their ingenuity and innovation sparked an ecosystem, but it's our innovation on top of theirs that brings it to the next level.
Should we not be paid for our efforts? Should we have the functionality that helped us build these businesses taken away or limited so we can't innovate more? Absolutely not.
I am in limbo on my Apple app. I have no idea if Steve Jobs will pull the plug on it soon. They have that power and I don't think that once something is accepted it should be taken down after to conform to new policies. Early adapters should be grandfathered in to the new terms and those terms should reflect it as such.
Consider the facts. If Facebook has 500,000 platform developers, how many page views to you think all of those applications built by those programmers are generating. And yes, Facebook has a CPM advertising model. Though developers have their own channels for creating revenue within their applications, Facebook still serves ads on all those pages too (and makes money).
It was always a symbiotic relationship. It's greed that's overcome them and now they want to become parasites by stealing innovation for cheap R&D. Talk about pirates...
Should we not be paid for our efforts? Should we have the functionality that helped us build these businesses taken away or limited so we can't innovate more? Absolutely not.
I am in limbo on my Apple app. I have no idea if Steve Jobs will pull the plug on it soon. They have that power and I don't think that once something is accepted it should be taken down after to conform to new policies. Early adapters should be grandfathered in to the new terms and those terms should reflect it as such.
Consider the facts. If Facebook has 500,000 platform developers, how many page views to you think all of those applications built by those programmers are generating. And yes, Facebook has a CPM advertising model. Though developers have their own channels for creating revenue within their applications, Facebook still serves ads on all those pages too (and makes money).
It was always a symbiotic relationship. It's greed that's overcome them and now they want to become parasites by stealing innovation for cheap R&D. Talk about pirates...
Added by AngryDeveloper (male)
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