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Apple Bans RSS Reader Due To Bad Word In Feed Link

btempleton writes "It all started when I prepared yet another Downfall subtitle parody. In this one, Hitler is the studio head, upset at all the Downfall parodies, and he wants to do DMCA takedowns on them all. (If you're a DMCA/DRM fighting Slashdotter, you'll like it.) The EFF, which I chair, blogged it on Deeplinks, and hilarity ensued. That weekend, Exact Magic, an iPhone developer, had submitted a special RSS reader app to display EFF news on the iPhone. Apple's iPhone app store evaluators looked at the RSS reader, read the feed it pointed to, and then played the linked-to video. They saw the F-word flash in the subtitles of the video, and then rejected the RSS-reading tool from the App Store. We're up to several levels of meta here — Apple has banned an app over a parody about banning, and is now parodying itself. Bonus: TFA also has the story of just how hard it is to be fully legal in obtaining the famous clip for parody."

29 of 254 comments (clear)

  1. Enough already, Apple by Tokerat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm an Apple fanboy and even I'm sick of this.

    If they're not careful, pretty soon the PSP Go App Store is going to be the one making all the money. Hey Sony, PSPhone in the works?

    --
    CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    1. Re:Enough already, Apple by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah.. it's pretty easy, you default to "Adults Only" mode, but you provide a "Clean Feed" mode which people can opt-in to. All your effort goes into bringing the "Clean Feed" up to date and, as such, even the kids won't want to use it, so one day you take a look at the numbers and say "why are we putting so much effort into this 1% of the market?" and get rid of it.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    2. Re:Enough already, Apple by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How the fuck difficult is it to realize what an RSS reader does and to realize the app doesn't 'do' that content, it just gets it from the feed?

      Does Apple have 5th graders reviewing this content?

      Description: "This app downloads and displays pictures." It would be reasonable to assume that those pictures could be pornography. However that's not what the program does. Holy hell.

    3. Re:Enough already, Apple by i.of.the.storm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hell, by those standards they should block Safari, since it's much more likely and easier to access inappropriate content with. This is getting pretty ridiculous.

      --
      All your base are belong to Wii.
    4. Re:Enough already, Apple by Jurily · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How the fuck difficult is it to realize what an RSS reader does and to realize the app doesn't 'do' that content, it just gets it from the feed?

      In fact, what's up with all that parental content bullshit? Is it going to scar children for life if they see a bad word? It's not like they don't hear enough in the television, their browser, their teacher ferchrissake.

      Not to mention every other kid they come in contact with. Should we ban those too? Just lock them in a box or something.

      Those are the heavy seven. Those are the ones that'll infect your soul,
      curve your spine, and keep the country from winning the war.
      "Shit, Piss, Fuck, Cunt, CockSucker, MotherFucker, and Tits"

    5. Re:Enough already, Apple by Z00L00K · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Censorship is more indecent than any use of profanity ever can be.

      Someone has to make a reality check.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    6. Re:Enough already, Apple by teh+kurisu · · Score: 4, Informative

      But you can block Safari, if you're a parent and you want control over what your child does with their iPhone. It's under Settings > General > Restrictions.

      What you can't do, however, is allow/block each and every application that your child might download from the App Store. You can block the installation of applications altogether, but it's rather obvious that Apple doesn't want you to do that - it cuts off a potential revenue stream for them.

    7. Re:Enough already, Apple by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 3, Informative

      Should parents not have the choice as to whether to allow their kids to be exposed to bad language, or are you advocating removing that responsibility from the parents?

      Parents may believe they have that choice, and in certain domains (e.g. the dinner table) they do. However children are great at finding stuff they aren't allowed to access, and the internet is full of things they shouldn't see, but they will, whether you want them to or not.

      As with their exposure to the rest of the outside world, the best thing you can do is to guide them, and indicate what is acceptable, and what is not. Personally I wouldn't let my kids just go and purchase apps on the store themselves till they were old enough to be responsible about it, but that's just me. By the time you allow them to purchase apps with your credit card I think you really have to let go of controlling their decisions.

      Quite apart from the futility of parental controls, Apple don't even have parental controls in place for apps - if they did, this sort of thing would not be an issue, as they'd allow some parents to attempt to control what their children can see, and everyone else would ignore them. As it is, they're trying to ban apps for allowing access to the internet or literature. This isn't hard-core porn or something, it's simply swear-words.

      By those standards, this page would be adult-only, most sites which young people frequent would be adult-only, in fact most of the internet would be adult-only.

      The approvals process is a joke, which in turn makes Apple look like a joke. Really this sort of nonsense should at least wait till they have some 'Adult' rating systems in place, and then they can mark most of the internet as indecent, or adult, or evil, or whatever they want to call them, and any app that access the internet as the same.

    8. Re:Enough already, Apple by growse · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's made by Apple. Of course Apple would rather decide for you what you want on your phone. It's all about the *experience* remember?

      --
      There is nothing interesting going on at my blog
    9. Re:Enough already, Apple by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What you can't do, however, is allow/block each and every application that your child might download from the App Store.

      Actually, I'd rather see parents have the ability to block apps than Apple, which ends up blocking them for all of us.

      The bigger question should be: "Why would you buy a child an iPhone?" Don't they have special phones for parents who don't trust or spend any time with their children?

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    10. Re:Enough already, Apple by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Should parents not have the choice as to whether to allow their kids to be exposed to bad language

      They already have the choice of whether to buy their kids an iPhone.

      I think Fisher-Price makes a colorful little phone that only lets kids phone home.

      Apple does us no favors.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    11. Re:Enough already, Apple by smitty97 · · Score: 4, Funny

      You are using a privately owned store...

      not if you're shopping for a car in the US these days...

      --
      mod me funny
    12. Re:Enough already, Apple by Resident+Emil · · Score: 5, Funny

      He's apparently thinking different.

    13. Re:Enough already, Apple by geminidomino · · Score: 3, Funny

      The cheapest iPod Touch is $229, or $179 refurbished.

      Besides, it's up to the parent to decide what to buy their child, what they should be allowed to do, and what kind of environment they should be brought up in.

      You mean it's NOT up to apple?

      Shock of shocks...

  2. Speaking as an Apple fanboi ... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... I can think of two possibilities here.

    1. Someone high up in the App Store hierarchy is completely batshit insane. They're a fundie wacko, or they're deathly afraid of the Think Of The Chiiildren wackos, or something like that. I really just can't believe that the orders to ban anything that can get dirty words from anywhere on the internet came down from upper management; they can't be that ignorant. So it's someone on a personal crusade who has just enough pull to make it work.

    2. Apple basically wants to own every internet-enabled app on the iPhone, and they're using these dumb excuses to get rid of any competition. Sooner or later, they think, everything you do on the iPhone that isn't strictly local will go through an app bearing the Apple logo.

    Either way, it's a dumb move. I'm one of those irritating smug Mac users everyone loves to whine about. The last five computers I've bought have been Macs, and the next five probably will be as well. Whenever anyone asks me about what to do with their malware-ridden PCs, I say, "get a Mac." And I was seriously considering getting an iPhone to go with my iPod and iEverythingElse ... but I'm not going to even think about it until Apple fixes whatever the hell is going on with the App Store. I really doubt I'm the only one.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    1. Re:Speaking as an Apple fanboi ... by Mr2001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Speaking as an Apple critic, I think there's a possibility you missed:

      3. Apple's system of approving apps has no objective guidelines, no oversight, and no accountability; the result is total fucking chaos. Individual testers are allowed to make decisions based on "offensiveness" criteria they make up themselves, and this particular app happened to be tested by an uptight moron who went to great lengths to find some reason to ban it.

      Based on the stories I've heard about rejected apps being approved simply by resubmitting them, this might even be true. If so, Apple needs to fire a bunch of people, and then write a real set of guidelines so everyone inside and outside the company is on the same page.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    2. Re:Speaking as an Apple fanboi ... by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Interesting

      4. They have an automated script that launches the app, greps the text on screen for naughty words, checks it doesn't crash/access things it shouldn't/leak memory etc. and rejects apps before a human even looks at them.

      I wonder if this is the right answer?

    3. Re:Speaking as an Apple fanboi ... by emlyncorrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But in this case, the "naughty words" are embedded into a video. So it's not just scanning the text, it would have to do OCR on each frame of the video too.

  3. Modus operandi by ianare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple tries to suppress something it doesn't like, in a way sure to show everyone what a bunch of pricks they are, and yet no one will do a thing about it. News at 11.

  4. Re:Apple == Nazis by ianare · · Score: 3, Funny

    I tried on red delicious, but all I accomplished was hurting my penis. Should I try drilling a hole in it first ?

  5. Re:Apple == Nazis by fractoid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cook the apple first, preferably in a delicious pastry crust. Isn't that the American way? :P

    --
    Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  6. Re:Bad words? by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Insightful
    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  7. It's feeling like a trap by Toonol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I managed to avoid the whole Apple experience; never bought an iPod, never bought a song from iTunes, never had any desire to get an iPhone. I'm feeling a bit relieved. The whole thing feels like a trap. If I had a thousand bucks tied up in all this interconnected web of apps, platforms, and media, with it's seemingly ever-constricting chains, I'd be pretty irritated.

    Lesson I've learned? Always buy IP-violating, unregulated, cheap Chinese knockoffs.

  8. Re:Bad words? by Toonol · · Score: 3, Informative

    Who cares if someone says/hears a swear word, really? It surely doesn't hurt anyone, unless they've been trained to be offended by them.

    Well, a lot of people HAVE been trained to be offended by them.

    It's time to realize that swearing is only "bad" due to religious baggage, nothing else.

    True, although I'd say it's cultural baggage that was influenced by religion. The crucial point is that swearing is also only "good" due to that baggage. If nobody cared about a particular swear word, it would soon fall out of favor for something that would be more offensive.

    In other words, if there was no taboo against saying 'fuck', there would be no reason for Hitler to be saying 'fuck' in the first place. (Except maybe to his dear wife.)

  9. Re:Bad words? by Fred_A · · Score: 4, Funny

    In other words, if there was no taboo against saying 'fuck', there would be no reason for Hitler to be saying 'fuck' in the first place. (Except maybe to his dear wife.)

    Would a pissed-off Hitler saying
    "My dear Himmler, I am thoroughly bothered by those irksome developments on the eastern front"
    sound better to you than
    "Fuck those damn Russians" ?

    --

    May contain traces of nut.
    Made from the freshest electrons.
  10. I have an idea to avoid this kind of fiasco by Planar · · Score: 4, Funny

    Publish all your contents under a license that says "you are not allowed to read/view/listen to this for purposes of reviewing or censorship", then sue their ass off when they do censor it. That would put the DMCA to good use, for once.

  11. In other news, Apple i-sunglasses by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple introduces special i-sunglasses that go completely opaque when near a beach, in case there are any topless women around (not sold in Europe).

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:In other news, Apple i-sunglasses by SharpFang · · Score: 5, Insightful

      because, unlike in the US, the sight of European topless girls doesn't cause anguish, disgust and general trauma.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  12. Re:Hypocritical Apple? by Stuart+Gibson · · Score: 3, Informative

    iTunes music store has explicit warnings for naughty words and parents can block access to those.

    The App store doesn't yet have them for anything but games (age ratings are coming for all apps in 3.0) so they are assuming all ages have access to all content. A number of apps have been rejected with the advisory that they are resubmitted when 3.0 is live as they can then be flagged as R rated or similar.

    --
    It's all fun and games until a 200' robot dinosaur shows up and trashes Neo-Tokyo... Again