Your friends and family can be asked to use any of the cross-platform messaging apps that are available, or use any of the still working and universal contact methods like SMS and phone calls. I have an iPhone and manage just fine to message my friends who have Android phones (even sending pictures and videos!), and use Discord, Signal, WhatsApp, Slack, Teams, Twitter, etc etc etc to talk to lots of different groups of people who are using "I don't care" device.
If I got sick of Windows, I could easily get rid of all of my Windows installations. But some of my games, even ones I bought and paid for, are not available on Linux. That is part and parcel a consideration I have to make regarding my choices. There are positives and negatives in every choice, and sometimes the negatives outweigh the positives. It's frustrating, and sometimes to make a choice you have to give up things you like, but that's life. Not getting to use FaceTime is not a significant cost, it's an emergent property of "I choose not to use iOS devices".
I do concede however that the "default messaging app" be just another "slot" in the OS that I can configure any way I want, no dark patterns a la Edge on Windows 10/11. But then again, I don't think iMessage has a URL handler anyways, so really it'd just be a few additions to the contacts card so I can share some link/picture/whatever to a contact's WhatsApp handle instead of their iMessage handle. Thankfully, the law in question from the OP does seem to shift us towards that future. Apple's walled-garden is fine, but if you play by the rules in that walled-garden, there shouldn't be favoritism for the gardener's services, and the gardener shouldn't be able to abuse their position to push their services either.
I'd personally prefer to just break up the gardener's company so their TV and Music streaming arm is a separate company.
If I got sick of Windows, I could easily get rid of all of my Windows installations. But some of my games, even ones I bought and paid for, are not available on Linux. That is part and parcel a consideration I have to make regarding my choices. There are positives and negatives in every choice, and sometimes the negatives outweigh the positives. It's frustrating, and sometimes to make a choice you have to give up things you like, but that's life. Not getting to use FaceTime is not a significant cost, it's an emergent property of "I choose not to use iOS devices".
I do concede however that the "default messaging app" be just another "slot" in the OS that I can configure any way I want, no dark patterns a la Edge on Windows 10/11. But then again, I don't think iMessage has a URL handler anyways, so really it'd just be a few additions to the contacts card so I can share some link/picture/whatever to a contact's WhatsApp handle instead of their iMessage handle. Thankfully, the law in question from the OP does seem to shift us towards that future. Apple's walled-garden is fine, but if you play by the rules in that walled-garden, there shouldn't be favoritism for the gardener's services, and the gardener shouldn't be able to abuse their position to push their services either.
I'd personally prefer to just break up the gardener's company so their TV and Music streaming arm is a separate company.