ZuoCen_Liu
8 hours ago
Apple’s Japanese Compliance Strategy: Is “Safety First” Strangling Independent Educational Apps? Apple just announced sweeping changes in Japan to comply with the Mobile Software Competition Act (MSCA). While the focus is on alternative marketplaces and third-party payments, the fine print regarding "Younger Users" is concerning. Under the new rules: Under 13: Apps cannot link to websites for transactions at all. Under 18: Mandatory "Parental Gates" for any non-IAP transactions. Kids Category: Zero links to external purchase methods, period. While framed as protection against scams, this creates a massive friction taxspecifically for the education sector. Most innovative educational tools are built by small teams who can't survive on Apple's 30% (or 15%) cut but also can't afford the drop-off caused by these new "security" friction points. My concern is that this "one-size-fits-all" protection will: Deter independent developers from building for the Japanese student market. Force a consolidated market where only giant publishers with massive marketing budgets can navigate the parental friction. Create a "Compliance Moat" where Apple uses "safety" as a justifiable way to make third-party payments so annoying that parents and devs just give up. Is there a way to protect children without effectively banning the economical bypass that these new laws were supposed to enable? Or is Japan’s MSCA actually a net-loss for the educational software ecosystem?