Tesla's hefty API fees threaten third-party app ecosystem
Tesla unveiled the pricing structure for its official API access and, in the process, sent shockwaves through the developer community. The exorbitant fees put the future of third-party apps in danger.
Developers of these apps operated in a gray area for years without formal access to Tesla's systems. The company finally released official API documentation late last year, and initially focused on fleet management. This sparked hope for an ecosystem of innovative third-party apps. Tesla's newly announced API pricing has put a damper on those hopes, with costs prohibitively high for many developers.
One prominent example is a popular third-party Tesla analytics and automation app, Tessie. Tessie's developer revealed on Reddit that running the app under Tesla's new pricing model will cost him around $60 million a year.
Other developers have chimed in with their own concerns. Tyler Corsair, founder of Teslascope, stated that the new API costs would amount to 7.5 times the app's monthly revenue. Some of the developers suggest that Tessie and Teslascope are not the worst affected.
The new pricing structure seems unsustainable on the face of things. Some developers are already exploring alternative solutions with Tessie's developer claiming to be able to bypass the API completely. But this approach may cause further complications rather than fix the situation.
Tesla's motivation behind these high API fees remains muddy at best. It is possible that the company's recent push into its own fleet management features is the reason. Tesla might be aiming to push users toward its own solutions by forcing third-party apps out of the ecosystem.
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