> You honestly think they "deliberately break the web browsers in their mobile devices" and are "making it actively difficult for web developers"?
In the sense that they have broken stuff because of decisions they consciously made, yes.
I doubt their motivation was to do that. I'm 90% sure that it was just an unintended (or worse than expected) side effect of trying to do something sensible with sites that weren't designed with mobile browsing in mind.
I do, however, reserve a 10% skepticism allowance for any potentially hostile policy adopted by certain big companies, including Apple and Google, that do have form when it comes to adopting (or turning a blind eye to) ethically shady practices that conveniently help the business model that actually makes them money.
In the sense that they have broken stuff because of decisions they consciously made, yes.
I doubt their motivation was to do that. I'm 90% sure that it was just an unintended (or worse than expected) side effect of trying to do something sensible with sites that weren't designed with mobile browsing in mind.
I do, however, reserve a 10% skepticism allowance for any potentially hostile policy adopted by certain big companies, including Apple and Google, that do have form when it comes to adopting (or turning a blind eye to) ethically shady practices that conveniently help the business model that actually makes them money.