Closed platform explained

A closed platform, walled garden, or closed ecosystem[1] [2] is a software system wherein the carrier or service provider has control over applications, content, and/or media, and restricts convenient access to non-approved applicants or content. This is in contrast to an open platform, wherein consumers generally have unrestricted access to applications and content.

Overview

For example, in telecommunications, the services and applications accessible on a cell phone on any given wireless device were formerly tightly controlled by the mobile operators. The operators limited the applications and developers that were available on users' home portals and home pages. Thus, a service provider might restrict user access to users whose account exhausted the pre-paid money on their account. This has long been a central issue constraining the telecommunications sector, as developers face huge hurdles in making their applications available to end-users.

In a more extreme example, the regulated 1970s American telephone system, Bell, owned all the hardware (including all phones) and had indirect control over the information sent through their infrastructure. It was an open government-sanctioned natural monopoly regulated by the Communications Act of 1934. However, in the landmark case Hush-A-Phone v. United States, Bell unsuccessfully sued a company producing plastic telephone attachments.

More generally, a walled garden can refer to a closed or exclusive set of information services provided for users. Similar to a real walled garden, a user is unable to escape this closed environment except through the designated entry/exit points or if the walls are removed.[3]

Aspects

A 2008 Harvard Business School working paper, entitled "Opening Platforms: How, When and Why?", differentiated a platform's openness/closedness by four aspects and gave example platforms:[4]

Aspect of closedness/openness of a platformLinuxWindowsmacOSApple iOS
Demand-side use (end-user) open open open open
Supply-side user (application developer) open open open closed
Platform provider (hardware/operating system (OS) bundle) open open closed closed
Platform sponsor (design & intellectual property (IP) rights owner) open closed closed closed

Examples

Some examples of walled gardens include:

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Tech-FAQ.com. Escaping the Walled Gardens in the Clouds. 7 October 2012. Memetic, Daniel .
  2. News: 7 October 2012 . Interview With Rosabeth Moss Kanter, author of SuperCorp (2009): No Matter How Big You Are, Diversify or Die . 2009 . Smith, Nicholas . Ericsson.com Company Docs.
  3. Web site: Definition of: walled garden. PCmag.com . 13 June 2012.
  4. News: Opening Platforms: How, When and Why? . Eisenmann, Thomas R. . Parker, Geoffrey . Van Alstyne, Marshall . . 30 June 2015 . 31 August 2008 . 2 . 10.2139/ssrn.1264012. Harvard Business School Entrepreneurial Management Working Paper No. 09-030.
  5. Book: Wu. Tim. Tim Wu. . 2016. Penguin Random House. New York. 9780385352017. 210.
  6. 29 February 2012. How the e-book landscape is becoming a walled garden. Mathew Ingram. Gigaom. 7 October 2012. 18 February 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210218001740/https://gigaom.com/2012/02/29/how-the-e-book-landscape-is-becoming-a-walled-garden/. dead.
  7. Web site: With New Kindle, Bezos Proves Ecosystems Matter More Than Hardware. Jay Akasie. 7 September 2012. 7 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120911014834/http://www.minyanville.com/sectors/technology/articles/amazon-new-kindle-amazon-kindle-family/9/7/2012/id/43794. 11 September 2012. dead.
  8. How Amazon Makes Money From The Kindle; Amazon's Kindle is no longer just a product: It's a whole ecosystem . Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry. 18 October 2011 . Business Insider . 29 November 2013.
  9. News: Battle for the Internet (Part III of series): Walled gardens look rosy for Facebook, Apple – and would-be censors. Charles Arthur . . 17 April 2012.
  10. News: . 1 July 2011 . Ben Bajarin . Why Competing With Apple is So Difficult .
  11. Web site: Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet both get "upgraded" with reduced functionality. ITWorld.com . Smith, Peter . 21 December 2011 . 10 January 2012 .
  12. Web site: Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet Receive Root Access Killing Software Updates. PCPerspective.com . Verry, Tim. 21 December 2011 . 10 January 2012 .
  13. News: CNet. Barnes & Noble adds Google Play store to its tablets: The Nook HD and HD+ may not be fully "open" Android tablets, but they're now much more open than they were. 2 May 2013. Carnoy, David.
  14. Web site: Encrypted Media Extensions. www.w3.org. en. 11 July 2017.
  15. https://medium.com/@soodsandeep/permissioned-blockchains-are-the-virgin-margaritas-of-cryptocurrency-2da976d93ce4 Permissioned blockchains are the virgin margaritas of cryptocurrency
  16. Web site: We Are the App Store . . . 29 November 2013.
  17. ITU News . The world of video games: Trends in video games and gaming . 10 . 2011 . Martin Adolph of ITU’s Telecommunication Standardization Bureau (TSB).
  18. Web site: Electronic Arts in 1995 . Robert A. Burgelman . Carrie C. Oliver . Stanford Graduate School of Business . 16 pages . 1 August 1997 . SM24-PDF-ENG . 29 November 2013.
  19. Web site: Liao . Rita . 2022-10-08 . Elon Musk's X app for 'everything' might be a non-starter in the US . 2022-10-28 . TechCrunch . en-US.