Payment processing software suppliers are ready to bypass Apple’s App Store Transaction Cut to developers.
Following yesterday’s judgment in Apple-Epic Antrit Trial, where Judge Yovon Gonzalez Rogers gave a direct shame to apple to pay the linked to the external payment because he ruled before, shared the stripe Documentation It shows iOS developers how to avoid the Apple Commission.
A X postsStripe Product Manager Michael Luo says the team has “quickly cooked” which iOS developers can walk through how to get money using stripes out of their applications, so that they can take advantage of the new option, which was possible through court decisions.
Apple has allowed developers to link to external websites for shopping, but it simply reduced its 30% commission by 3% and added “horrible screen” that warned customers about the possible danger to pay developers outside his App Store. Judge Rogers said that Apple’s principle does not follow the soul or law letter in the preceding order of its previous order, and instructs the agency to change its policies immediately.
Stripe New documentation Developers explain how developers can set up a link inside their application to pay for digital materials using a stripe checkout. The option will be reinstated on a secure, stripe-hosted payment page as part of the new checkout experience of an app.
Of course, the use of stripes is not as easy to take advantage of the default option of Apple’s in-app purchase, as it is necessary to set up and maintain their own payment page and checkout experience. However the stripe’s Standard The payment processing fee is $ 2.5% of Plus $ 1.5 per transaction, it turns 15% of the Commission of Apple’s 5% of the Commission (or even Apple’s small biz program or subscription applications, from the second year to subscription applications).
The announcement of Stripe is already receiving the traction, the news has received thousands of choice in X from enthusiastic developers.
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Long-time Apple critic, David Heinmiah Hanson, who is the creator of Ruby on Rail and co-owners of 37 signals, which produces software like Basecamp and Hey, has also praised Stripe resolution. Hanson, over the years, has repeatedly quarrel Apple to reject Hey’s email and calendaring apps because they were set up to avoid using Apple’s in-app purchases.
At x, Hanson suggested Changes in Apple’s policies will now make more business possible in the App Store to allow the external payment.
“Apple’s loss in court is instantly opening the whole new world for app developers,” he said. “Under the old 30% rule the whole business models were impossible.”
