Google's Android head, Hiroshi Lockheimer, says he doesn't want Apple to bring iMessage to Android but has stepped up calls for iMessage to support the Rich Communication Services (RCS) messaging standard used on Android.
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Read nowRCS is the modern take on the SMS standard that's supported on Android but is not supported by Apple iMessage (which does support SMS).
This technical gap was highlighted in aWall Street Journalarticle on the weekend detailing how US teens are using iMessage to socially isolate Android users from group chats. Messages from Android users are displayed in iMessage in green bubbles versus blue bubbles for messages received from fellow iPhone users.
Lockheimer's response was that Apple's "iMessage lock-in" showed it was "using peer pressure and bullying as a way to sell products" and suggested iMessage support for RCS would fix this problem.
Apple's iMessage lock-in is a documented strategy. Using peer pressure and bullying as a way to sell products is disingenuous for a company that has humanity and equity as a core part of its marketing. The standards exist today to fix this. https://t.co/MiQqMUOrgn
- Hiroshi Lockheimer (@lockheimer) January 8, 2022
Lockheimer, who last year offered Apple Google's help to enable RCS support on iMessage, on Monday added a clarification to his initial response to the WSJ article.
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"We're not asking Apple to make iMessage available on Android. We're asking Apple to support the industry standard for modern messaging (RCS) in iMessage, just as they support the older SMS / MMS standards," Lockheimer wrote on Twitter.
Confidential emails from Apple execs disclosed via its court case with Epic Games showed the iPhone maker thinks bringing iMessage to Android would "remove an obstacle to iPhone families giving their kids Android phones", as noted by The Verge.
Google is the main proponent of RCS thanks to multiple arrangements with major carriers, but RCS is yet to become a standard like SMS, in part because Apple so far has declined to support it in iMessage as it does for SMS.
Lockheimer added more reasons why it would be good for everyone if Apple supported RCS in iMessage.
"Why is this important? Phone number-based messaging is the fallback that we all know will work," he wrote.
"If you want to reach someone and you don't know whether they use app x y or z, you have high confidence that sending them a text (SMS) will work. That's because it's a standard and supported by essentially all mobile devices. That's probably why Apple supported SMS to begin with."
Apple supporting RCS would improve the experience for iOS and Android users, he argues, adding that "RCS will also improve the experience and privacy for iOS users."
"By not incorporating RCS, Apple is holding back the industry and holding back the user experience for not only Android users but also their own customers," Lockheimer writes.