Will The Android Market Be More Appealing To Developers Than The App Store?

Posted on : Sep 02 2008 | Posted under Wireless Technology |

In the past month, it has become clear that Apple, through their App Store, is going to exercise a lot of control over the programs that iPhone users download. The list of removed App Store downloads include Tetris clones, harmless but expensive novelties, movie listings and useful wireless applications. Although many have sung the praises of the new system, this trend of contingent generativity - Jonathan Zittrain’s term for intermediaries exerting control over new creativity - has some worrying implications. An ecosystem with perfect enforceability of rules will come to preempt the creativity which comes from the edge (and even piracy). If developers worry that their applications will be shut down by an overzealous enforcement organization (there is no evidence Apple is pulling applications after anything more than a third-party complaint), then innovation will stagnate.

Google seems to understand this. In announcing their competing service, the Android Market, the Android team notes “We chose the term “market” rather than “store” because we feel that developers should have an open and unobstructed environment to make their content available.” Application creators will be as free to post information as videographers are to post to YouTube. Although the lack of review before posting doesn’t mean Google will not remove applications if complaints are made, their ethic of freedom suggests they see mobile applications in the same light as the Internet: creators will build unanticipated, useful applications if given the chance to experiment freely.

Kevin Donovan is an expert at the Techdirt Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Kevin Donovan and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.

Permalink | Comments | Email This Story


Subscribe with your favorite web-based news readers below:
RSS Cell Phone News Feed | Add to: Bloglines : Yahoo : Google Reader or Homepage : NewsGator

Latest Phones

LG Xenon

Published on 10/08/2009 at 10:16 PM

LG Xenon ReviewThe LG Xenon is a new touchscreen messaging-centric cell phone featuring a slide-out QWERTY keyboard, Bluetooth 2.0, 2 megapixel camera, a GPS, voice-driven menu navigation and dialing and more...

Sanyo SCP-2700

Published on 06/19/2009 at 10:59 PM

Sanyo SCP-2700Built for sophisticated texting, the SCP-2700 has a full QWERTY keyboard, T9 predictive text entry, and a threaded, chat-style view of messages. Sanyo SCP-2700 Compatibility Features, Technical Specifications and pictures.

Samsung Impression

Published on 06/10/2009 at 09:45 AM

Samsung ImpressionRead The New AT&T's Samsung Impression A877 Review with complete list of features including Compatibility Features, Technical Specifications and pictures.

Samsung Magnet

Published on 05/25/2009 at 08:38 AM

Samsung MagnetThe New AT&T Samsung Magnet is a trendy, orange candy bar-style phone that features a full QWERTY keyboard for fast, accurate messaging.

LG Incite CT810

Published on 01/19/2009 at 10:41 PM

LG InciteThe LG Incite touchscreen cell phone for AT&T features quad-band GPS and tri-band HSDPA high-speed data, WiFi, an FM radio, and stereo Bluetooth for connectivity. The 3" WVGA touchscreen provides a responsive user experience, and the 3-MP camera supports video capture and AT&T's Video Share.