Apple has removed an app called ICEBlock from the App Store after warnings from law enforcement. ICEBlock let people mark on a map where they saw immigration officers, and then shared those alerts with others nearby. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the app was dangerous because it put officers at risk, and asked Apple to take it down. Apple agreed, saying it wanted the App Store to remain safe and trusted.
The removal happened shortly after a shooting at an ICE building in Dallas, where a gunman fired from a rooftop and killed two detainees. Officials claimed the shooter used tracking apps like ICEBlock to target the facility. ICEBlock’s creator, Joshua Aaron, says this is false. He argues the app was designed to protect communities during immigration raids, not to endanger officers, and points out it was downloaded more than a million times. He says he will fight Apple’s decision.
Apple has made similar moves before. In 2019, it removed an app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police. In 2021, it removed a voting app tied to Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny. Last year in China, Apple pulled WhatsApp, Telegram, and other messaging apps after pressure from local authorities. These cases show Apple often bends to government requests, even when the apps are popular.
Experts warn that governments can pressure private companies into silencing apps without passing any laws. That means Apple’s App Store has become a powerful gatekeeper, deciding which tools people can or cannot use when safety and politics collide.
#apple #appstore #privacy #freespeech #immigration #lawenforcement #technology #policy
The removal happened shortly after a shooting at an ICE building in Dallas, where a gunman fired from a rooftop and killed two detainees. Officials claimed the shooter used tracking apps like ICEBlock to target the facility. ICEBlock’s creator, Joshua Aaron, says this is false. He argues the app was designed to protect communities during immigration raids, not to endanger officers, and points out it was downloaded more than a million times. He says he will fight Apple’s decision.
Apple has made similar moves before. In 2019, it removed an app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police. In 2021, it removed a voting app tied to Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny. Last year in China, Apple pulled WhatsApp, Telegram, and other messaging apps after pressure from local authorities. These cases show Apple often bends to government requests, even when the apps are popular.
Experts warn that governments can pressure private companies into silencing apps without passing any laws. That means Apple’s App Store has become a powerful gatekeeper, deciding which tools people can or cannot use when safety and politics collide.
#apple #appstore #privacy #freespeech #immigration #lawenforcement #technology #policy
Apple has removed an app called ICEBlock from the App Store after warnings from law enforcement. ICEBlock let people mark on a map where they saw immigration officers, and then shared those alerts with others nearby. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the app was dangerous because it put officers at risk, and asked Apple to take it down. Apple agreed, saying it wanted the App Store to remain safe and trusted.
The removal happened shortly after a shooting at an ICE building in Dallas, where a gunman fired from a rooftop and killed two detainees. Officials claimed the shooter used tracking apps like ICEBlock to target the facility. ICEBlock’s creator, Joshua Aaron, says this is false. He argues the app was designed to protect communities during immigration raids, not to endanger officers, and points out it was downloaded more than a million times. He says he will fight Apple’s decision.
Apple has made similar moves before. In 2019, it removed an app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police. In 2021, it removed a voting app tied to Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny. Last year in China, Apple pulled WhatsApp, Telegram, and other messaging apps after pressure from local authorities. These cases show Apple often bends to government requests, even when the apps are popular.
Experts warn that governments can pressure private companies into silencing apps without passing any laws. That means Apple’s App Store has become a powerful gatekeeper, deciding which tools people can or cannot use when safety and politics collide.
#apple #appstore #privacy #freespeech #immigration #lawenforcement #technology #policy
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