IAAL with experience interpreting Federal antitrust complaints. Allegation 16 is not a specific allegation that Apple deliberately withholds features from Safari in order to steer developers toward building apps. It’s a “narrative” paragraph that is intended to characterize Apple’s overall behavior. It alleges that Apple is self-serving, which, at the end of the day, isn’t really that surprising for an American business enterprise, and isn’t in itself unlawful.
> yet Safari still gets hacked
Talk about moving goalposts.
Every browser to date has had security vulnerabilities, and all the major vendors respond to close them when found to impact customers. Expecting Apple—or any developer for that matter—to have a perfect track record is unrealistic. Moreover, a large part of improving overall security is defense in depth, and it’s unreasonable to expect a vendor obsessed with security on its customers’ behalf to intentionally disable one of its defenses if it’s a known vulnerability vector.
I’m not a member of some Apple cult. There are plenty of things I don’t like about Apple; and no company is perfect. At any rate, name-calling one’s opponents isn’t allowed here, and when a discussion stoops to that nadir, I’m out. I’ll let the reader decide who has the better argument.
>IAAL with experience interpreting Federal antitrust complaints
If so, please provide your bona fides. But you won't.
>Apple employs some of the brightest software and hardware security experts in the business.
16. Apple wraps itself in a cloak of privacy, security, and consumer preferences to justify its anticompetitive conduct. Indeed, it spends billions on marketing and branding to promote the self-serving premise that only Apple can safeguard consumers’ privacy and security interests.
I provided the section of the DOJ lawsuit that states that Apple's portrayal of their security stance is nothing more than posturing and anti-competitive. You seem to think Apple are the absolute best in security, but they aren't even close to that. I don't believe that you are a lawyer and more than you believe that I am a security expert.