Apple's Confused iPhone App Censors: Softcore Porn? Ok.

from the this-time-around dept

The near total arbitrariness of Apple’s iPhone morality police continues… We’ve already noted how odd it is that certain apps got rejected — such as an eBook reader that users might, possibly be able to read the Kama Sutra with, because it provided access to the public domain library at Project Gutenberg. Never mind the fact that the same content could be accessed easily via a browser — such as the included Safari browser on the iPhone. However, other apps seem to get through with no problem. Dave Title notes that Apple apparently had no problem with a Suicide Girls’ app that allowed users to “strip” women down to their underwear simply by flipping the phone. It’s a silly meaningless app (and doesn’t contain any actual nudity), but it does make you wonder. Why is one app potentially harmful according to Apple’s morality police, while the other is perfectly fine?

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Comments on “Apple's Confused iPhone App Censors: Softcore Porn? Ok.”

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29 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

If the end result of the app is still SFW, then what’s the point? I can understand not wanting to link to porn and such, but the strip down models are likely wearing nothing less than most girls wear to the beach on a given day or appear on afternoon soap operas in.

Where there is smoke, the is Mike fanning the flames.

Anonymous Poster says:

Re: Re:

The problem is that people could find the app’s content offensive, whereas apps like Eucalyptus don’t contain any actual content that people could find offensive (it just allows people to read/find content from other sites on the Internet), and the only reason Eucalyptus was rejected was because someone could access content they found offensive through the app DESPITE the fact that said content wasn’t built into the app itself (as well as, y’know, the whole “I can read this from Safari” hypocrisy involved with the rejection).

Thankfully, Eucalyptus was eventually allowed into the app store (partially because of all the Internet backlash, I’m sure).

Marcus Carab (profile) says:

Re: Re: The Appstore Stories

It’s a problem that annoys developers and that Apple has not yet addressed or made any public statement on. Why shouldn’t people like Mike continue to comment on such things? He doesn’t really seem very “outraged” to me – just a little annoyed and confused that a company (which is normally well organized and operated) would let this situation persist – and so he will continue to point out examples of the harm/hypocrisy until something changes.

Ryan (profile) says:

I’ve found that if you just keep re-submitting the app without making any changes, eventually you’ll get a moderator that isn’t an idiot.

I’ve had to do that with every iteration of the noslang.com internet slang dictionary app. ( http://www.noslang.com/iphone.php )

They kept rejecting it because people might be offended by the word “ass”, then “a*s” was offensive, but “a**” wasn’t. I never understood that.

TimmyT says:

Who cares?

Why someone would buy a device whose apps are controlled by a central authority is beyond me. I’ve been using Windows Mobile for years and although the interface isn’t as fancy, I can load any damn app I please, I can even write and distribute my own. Same with Palm OS, last I checked you can load whatever the hell you want on your device, no one cares. I never used iTunes and their DRM bullshit, and I’ll never use an iPhone with their prudish censorship bullshit. Apple is irrelevant here in the corporate world where Windows Mobile and Blackberry rule the mobile workforce.

Luci says:

Re: Re: Who cares?

I do not now, nor have I ever, nor will I ever own anything from Apple. Why? Personal preference. It has nothing to do with being married to a platform, which seems to be the case at your major IT company if everyone uses the same device. Congratulations on contradicting yourself in two small lines.

TimmyT says:

Re: Re: Who cares?

I never said I was married to any platform, if you read my post I even said there are Blackberry and Palm users too, I just prefer Windows Mobile for myself. And we do have some iPhone users, but they are literally maybe 5% if that. We actually have more Blackberry users than anything, and I believe that is the general consensus in the corporate world. Our users can get whatever phone they want, if they want to be chained to Apple’s draconian policies then fine, as long as they get their emails, contacts, and calendar on their phone that’s all I care about (yay iPhone 2.0 with ActiveSync). I’m just saying I will never personally lock myself into Apple’s products, the rest of the world has the freedom to do what they choose with their media and their devices. Same reason I still buy CDs and rip them to MP3 myself. Freedom!

Anonymous Coward says:

Apple

I used to think Apple products were good, but slightly overpriced. Over the last year, I’ve changed my viewpoint, and now recommend people avoid the whole Apple trap completely, even if they have money to waste. The whole iTunes/iPod/iPhone combination now seems like a trap, one with slowly more restrictive chains.

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