> I completely agree about notification spam being an issue, but why should native apps get a head start over PWAs here?
They shouldn't, which is why I think this is an overall positive change. It's mostly that when you add ways people can receive notifications, it can only increase the amount of notifications you can get, not reduce it, and notifications for most applications have at best dubious utility for the end user.
Web apps are also not beholden to the app store rules, so I think they at least have slightly higher chance of being abused, not that the app store prevents companies like Uber from spamming you with advertisements and bundling them with delivery notifications, like you mentioned.
They shouldn't, which is why I think this is an overall positive change. It's mostly that when you add ways people can receive notifications, it can only increase the amount of notifications you can get, not reduce it, and notifications for most applications have at best dubious utility for the end user.
Web apps are also not beholden to the app store rules, so I think they at least have slightly higher chance of being abused, not that the app store prevents companies like Uber from spamming you with advertisements and bundling them with delivery notifications, like you mentioned.