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rglullistoday at 2:00 PM2 repliesview on HN

> That does not make it illegal.

"Both parties are okay with the terms" is far from being sufficient to make something "legal".

Tie-in sales between software and services is not different from price dumping. If any of the Big Tech corporations were from any country that is not the US, the FTC would be doing anything in their power to stop them.


Replies

nerdjontoday at 2:13 PM

> Tie-in sales between software and services is not different from price dumping.

I disagree, in many cases what you are specifically paying for is the combination of the software and the service that are designed to work together. And in many cases do not work independent of eachother.

There are countless cases of this, that what you are paying for is a thing that is made up of a piece of software and a serverside component. MMO's (and gaming in general) being a major example of this, but so are many of the apps I pay for subscriptions for on my phone.

The actual technical implementation of how it works is irrelevant when it is clear what it is you are paying for.

> "Both parties are okay with the terms" is far from being sufficient to make something "legal".

True but the opposite is also true, just because you don't like the terms it does not make it illegal.

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skeledrewtoday at 5:48 PM

> Tie-in sales between software and services

Look at it this way: the service that you're accessing is really a (primarily desired) side-effect of the software. So re subscriptions, what they're actually providing are the apps (web, desktop, etc), and the apps use their service to aid the fulfillment of their functionality. Those wanting direct access to the internal service can get an API key for that purpose. That's just how their product offering is structured.