![]() ![]() Senate antitrust hearing on app stores gives Apple critics a big soapbox ()Īndeer somewhat dodged the question, saying, “Senator, if I understand the question correctly, we have separate teams that manage the App Store and that are engaged in product development strategy here at Apple.”īlumenthal then clarified what he meant by “firewall.” He explained that it doesn’t mean whether or not there are separate teams in place, but whether there’s an internal prohibition on sharing data between the App Store and the people who run Apple’s other businesses.Īndeer then answered, “Senator, we have controls in place.” Now Tile claims Apple has also unfairly entered its market () with AirTag.ĭuring his questioning, Blumenthal asked Apple and Google’s representatives at the hearing - Kyle Andeer, Apple’sĬhief compliance officer and Wilson White, Google’s senior director of Public Policy & Government Relations, respectively - if they employed any sort of “firewall” in between their app stores and their business strategy. Over the years, developers claimed Apple has “sherlocked” a number of apps (), including Konfabulator (desktop widgets), iPodderX (podcast manager), Sandvox (app for building websites) and Growl (a notification system for Mac OS X) and, in more recent years, F.lux () (blue light reduction tool for screens) Duet and Luna () (apps that makes iPad a secondary display), as well as various screen-time-management tools (). The nickname “Sherlock” later became shorthand () for any time Apple copies an idea from a third-party developer that threatens to or even destroys their business. Following the success of Karelia’s product, Apple added Watson’s same functionality into its own search tool, and Watson was effectively put out of business. A third-party developer, Karelia Software, created an alternative tool called Watson (). Sherlock, which has its own Wikipedia entry ((software)) under software, comes from Apple’s search tool in the early 2000s called Sherlock. Apple, in particular, was called out for the practice of copying other apps by Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), who said the practice had become so common that it earned a nickname with Apple’s developer community: “sherlocking.” ![]() ![]() Senate (), Apple and Google representatives were questioned on whether they have a “strict firewall” or other internal policies in place that prevent them from leveraging the data from third-party businesses operating on their app stores to inform the development of their own competitive products. ![]()
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