Amazon’s Fire TV platform is in the process of ditching Android for an in-house VegaOS, a change that’s been controversial among users. In an interview, Amazon’s VP of Fire TV explains some of the reasoning behind the decision, but only one part really makes sense.
In an interview with Cord Busters, Amazon VP of Fire TV, Aidan Marcuss, discussed the platform’s recent shift to VegaOS among other topics. But that’s obviously the most interesting of the bunch, and the interview kicks off with the burning question – if Fire TV customers adopted this platform because of its openness, why would Amazon move to a closed ecosystem?
The answer comes in a couple of parts, starting with the one argument that’s hard to ignore. VegaOS is a very lightweight platform and, as such, allows Amazon to build Fire TV hardware that’s even less expensive. Marcuss explained that “Vega was an opportunity for us to continue to innovate and deliver more capabilities, even on the least expensive devices,” pointing to the Fire TV Stick 4K Select, which has just 1GB of RAM on board.
Adding to that, Marcuss pointed to the security side of things, which was “sort of upmost in my mind.” He then went on to address the elephant in the room, the rampant use of sideloading on Fire TV to use apps meant for piracy, saying that it’s “not a Fire TV specific platform truth,” and:










