Apple iOS 13: Mouse support, dark mode, and other rumored features [www.businessinsider.com]
Report: Screen-Time App Developers Say Apple Is Systematically Kicking Them Off App Store [gizmodo.com]
Apple amping up purges of apps that are similar to iOS 12 Screen Time [appleinsider.com]
Apple has edged out a number of third-party screen time and parental control apps: report [www.theverge.com]
3 Ways iOS 13 Will Make You More Productive [www.tomsguide.com]
Apple Using Dominant App Store Position to Crack Down on Third-Party Screen Time Apps [www.iphonehacks.com]
Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction [www.nytimes.com]
Apple accused of clamping down on apps competing with Screen Time (updated) [www.engadget.com]
Phone addiction pushback: Apple blocks popular apps to monitor screen-time [www.axios.com]
Apple is removing and restricting third-party screen time apps, report says [edition.cnn.com]
Apple Cracks Down on Apps that Limit Screen Time [geeknewscentral.com]
70.8 Percent of US Phones Sold by Samsung, Apple [www.pcmag.com]
Phil Schiller says Apple pulling third-party screen time apps due to privacy abuses, as Tony Fadell calls Screen Time 'a rush job' [9to5mac.com]
Apple is removing and restricting third-party screen time apps, report says [edition.cnn.com]
Phil Schiller Lays Out Apple's Case for Cracking Down on Screen Time Monitoring Apps [www.macrumors.com]
After launching Screen Time, Apple is interfering with competing third party parental control apps [betanews.com]
Purged screen time monitoring apps misused enterprise tools, Schiller says [appleinsider.com]
Phil Schiller Explains Why Apple Removed Third-Party Screen Time Apps from App Store [www.iphonehacks.com]
Phil Schiller氏、一部のサードパーティ製ペアレンタルコントロールアプリをApp Storeから削除した理由を説明 [www.macotakara.jp]
Netsanity DOES NOT rely on an APP to work! Try us for free: Report: Screen-Time App Developers Say #Apple Is Systematically Kicking Them Off App Store https://t.co/OJAoJFXdq8 via @gizmodo #screentime #parenting #ourpact #meetcircle #Applenews #onlinesafety #parenting
— Netsanity (@NetSanityMobile) April 27, 2019
Apple has edged out a number of third-party screen time and parental control apps: report https://t.co/Un2fAo3nsO pic.twitter.com/i4h2QJ9CMb
— The Verge (@verge) April 27, 2019
If you want to know what everyone will be talking about months from now, read TechCrunch. pic.twitter.com/vJRvyYKQ4r
— Matthew Panzarino (@panzer) April 27, 2019
Two app makers filed a complaint to E.U. officials this week. Apple's use of the App Store has recently drawn antitrust scrutiny, and these revelations could intensify that.
— Jack Nicas (@jacknicas) April 27, 2019
Read our full story on Apple's moves and their implications: https://t.co/W9vSTPsxGz
This week at #Time100Summit, @tim_cook won applause by bemoaning extensive screen time, and talking up @apple’s efforts to help people scale back.
— Anand Giridharadas (@AnandWrites) April 27, 2019
Now the @nytimes reveals the truth: Apple is using the halo of such rhetoric to actually crack down on apps that fight addiction. https://t.co/qd7TF5UJDb
Last June, to much fanfare, Apple announced new tools to track and limit screen time.
— Jack Nicas (@jacknicas) April 27, 2019
Then it quietly began purging apps that had fought iPhone addiction for years.
Thread:
There's a fundamental conflict with Apple's services revenue narrative which requires increased engagement (music, games, iCloud, etc) and seriously tackling phone addiction.
— Dare Obasanjo (@Carnage4Life) April 27, 2019
These goals were better aligned when business growth meant selling more phones.https://t.co/v1gC3dvd1w
Not really- Apple is cracking down on apps exfiltrating data and violating AppStore policies. It just happens that this last batch of scamware is disguised as kid iPhone addiction fighting. https://t.co/vGOpdOsj0W
— Miguel de Icaza (@migueldeicaza) April 27, 2019
Apple bans parental control and screen-limiting apps because it may cause users to spend less time on their iPhones. Tim Cook: "Keep staring at your glowing screen, zombie chimp!" https://t.co/mEuZVVio9R
— Roosh (@rooshv) April 27, 2019
Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction https://t.co/zroIK1p5rn Be sensible, switch to android and download @e_mydata ROM's made by @gael_duval and team ..check for your device here https://t.co/4bA6a3HGJa #dataprivacy #MyDataIsMyData
— Manoj Nair (@manojnairtweets) April 27, 2019
Apple’s continued capricious, opaque administration of the App Store is scandalous and a stain on the company. May @ewarren’s call to prevent tech companies from competing against their own stores become law! https://t.co/LCXICEAPYO
— DHH (@dhh) April 27, 2019
Yikes https://t.co/6bYEYu2Ykq
— nilay patel (@reckless) April 27, 2019
Two app makers filed a complaint to E.U. officials this week. Apple's use of the App Store has recently drawn antitrust scrutiny, and these revelations could intensify that.
— Jack Nicas (@jacknicas) April 27, 2019
Read our full story on Apple's moves and their implications: https://t.co/W9vSTPsxGz
"Over the past year, Apple has removed or restricted at least 11 of the 17 most downloaded screen-time and parental-control apps"https://t.co/8afJRjjhNL
— Erik Brynjolfsson (@erikbryn) April 27, 2019
Dear @nytimes this article misses the very dark side of these apps - they allow controlling and abusive parents and partners to see where you are. These have been used in family and domestic violence situations. Pls update the article. @EFF https://t.co/rINZRfgr0m
— Andrew van der Stock (@vanderaj) April 27, 2019
New data analysis shows that Apple has removed or restricted at least 11 of the most downloaded screen-time tracking and parental-control apps.https://t.co/KE4EbORGTG
— Axios (@axios) April 27, 2019
Wearables | Phil Schiller says Apple pulling third-party screen time apps due to privacy abuses, as Tony Fadell calls Screen Time ‘a rush job’ https://t.co/TDs3g5vu36 | @9to5mac pic.twitter.com/FCUkWQDkDx
— AppleWatchGuru (@AppleWatchGuru) April 28, 2019
Phil Schiller says Apple pulling third-party screen time apps due to privacy abuses, as Tony Fadell calls Screen Time 'a rush job' https://t.co/2n06wwG34m
— Lance Ulanoff (@LanceUlanoff) April 28, 2019
Blunt. Knee-jerk. Uninformed. https://t.co/gScAChveOq
— Kontra (@counternotions) April 28, 2019
And wrong. https://t.co/b1hNr0q60R
Good call, Apple. MDM is no joke. Having used MDM I’d never enroll a personal device on an MDM server. | Phil Schiller Lays Out Apple's Case for Cracking Down on Screen Time Monitoring Apps - MacRumors https://t.co/jnHocjXjTF
— Chris Wagner (@cwagdev) April 28, 2019
애플이 iOS 12의 스크린 타임과 비슷한 기능을 가진 써드파티 앱을 앱 스토어에서 내려 지위 남용이라는 요지의 뉴욕 타임스 기사가 나온 가운데, 필 쉴러가 이메일에서 “대기업용 기기 관리 기능(MDM)을 활용하는 앱은 보안상 문제가 있기 때문에” 삭제했다고 답장했다.https://t.co/yf095Jbbtn
— 이주형 (쿠도군) (@KudoKun_) April 28, 2019
It disappoints me to no longer trust NYT’s journalistic integrity - intentionally omitting the risks of third party apps using MDM to further drive their point that Apple is anticompetitive. https://t.co/43zpaUJGzG
— Cemre Güngör (@gem_ray) April 28, 2019
Wait till Apple finds out how many parents install Jamf Now to manage their kids’ devices https://t.co/Bx04uQcF7a
— nilay patel (@reckless) April 28, 2019
Confirmed. Apps were misusing MDM profiles. Apple shut it down to protect users device security and privacy: https://t.co/fAcgcGeIAS
— Taylor McCaslin ?️? (@digital_SaaS) April 28, 2019
“No one, except you, should have unrestricted access to manage your child’s device, know their location, track their app use, control their mail accounts, web surfing, camera use, network access, and even remotely erase their devices.”
— Nati Shochat ??♂️ (@natisho) April 28, 2019
100% agree.
https://t.co/xpEoJLAZLw
Wait till Apple finds out how many parents install Jamf Now to manage their kids’ devices https://t.co/Bx04uQcF7a
— nilay patel (@reckless) April 28, 2019
Install screen-time monitoring apps? What could possibly go wrong? Answer: untrammeled spyware. https://t.co/zgxoKa0pUb /cc @EinsteinsAttic @TheABB @Livingstone_S @OpenRightsGroup @eff
— Alec Muffett (@AlecMuffett) April 28, 2019
Good call, Apple. MDM is no joke. Having used MDM I’d never enroll a personal device on an MDM server. | Phil Schiller Lays Out Apple's Case for Cracking Down on Screen Time Monitoring Apps - MacRumors https://t.co/jnHocjXjTF
— Chris Wagner (@cwagdev) April 28, 2019
1/ This article, if true, is deeply disturbing. When it comes to our children’s & our personal digital consumption, users want & deserve more options & access to diverse apps/controls to meet our often specific & niche management needs, not less. https://t.co/UUvJJp1nzF
— Tony Fadell (@tfadell) April 28, 2019
It disappoints me to no longer trust NYT’s journalistic integrity - intentionally omitting the risks of third party apps using MDM to further drive their point that Apple is anticompetitive. https://t.co/43zpaUJGzG
— Cemre Güngör (@gem_ray) April 28, 2019
A @jacknicas story that parents w/ iPhone kids should read.
— Nick Confessore (@nickconfessore) April 28, 2019
Apple’s parental control feature is clunky and poorly featured. Probably the second worst Apple app I’ve encountered after Music.
Yet they are shutting down all the competing apps. https://t.co/m1i3FSGxDa
Phil Schiller Lays Out Apple’s Case for Cracking Down on Screen Time Monitoring Apps https://t.co/9VmAbeECuB by @eslivka pic.twitter.com/j3T4eqbJOy
— MacRumors.com (@MacRumors) April 28, 2019
Blunt. Knee-jerk. Uninformed. https://t.co/gScAChveOq
— Kontra (@counternotions) April 28, 2019
And wrong. https://t.co/b1hNr0q60R
By definition, any app that lets you ‘fight phone addition’ or‘control your children’s internet use’ requires invasive access to everything on your phone by a third-party company. It needs to see everything you do. 1/3 https://t.co/VyeWhzE20Q
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) April 28, 2019
Install screen-time monitoring apps? What could possibly go wrong? Answer: untrammeled spyware. https://t.co/zgxoKa0pUb /cc @EinsteinsAttic @TheABB @Livingstone_S @OpenRightsGroup @eff
— Alec Muffett (@AlecMuffett) April 28, 2019
I have a bigger question here : why did apple let them in the app store in the first place. If MdM is the issue it should have been flagged day 1 and not after multiple approvals. https://t.co/4f0CA16mRG
— Ouriel Ohayon (@OurielOhayon) April 28, 2019
Purged screen time monitoring apps misused enterprise tools, Schiller says https://t.co/f08YZ6BT61
— Evan Kirstel at #WHCC19 #WashingtonDC (@evankirstel) April 28, 2019
사용시간 제한 서드파티 앱을 내린 것을 두고 NYT가 비판 기사를 냈는데 필 실러가 고객에게 답장한 이메일로 자사의 행동을 옹호. 한마디로 기업용 사용자를 관리하기 위한 MDM을 유용해서 개인 사용자를 통제하려 해서 내렸다고. https://t.co/wCmLTp1V8I
— 푸른곰 (@purengom) April 28, 2019
애플, 다수 서드파티 스크린 타임 및 부모 컨트롤 앱 단속 강화. 다운로드가 가장 많은 17개 앱 중 11개 삭제 혹은 제한 조치 당함. 애플, 이들이 기기에서 데이터를 너무 많이 수집해 규정을 위반했다고 말해. 금주 초 Kidslox와 Qustodio 두 앱 개발자 EU에 반독점 제소. https://t.co/zhpv6YtODq
— Wan Ki Choi (@wkchoi) April 27, 2019
Just a reminder that apps can come and go! Having conversations with your kids and helping manage screen time as a family can help all the time !
— Kyle Berger (@edtechcto) April 28, 2019
Apple has edged out a number of third-party screen time and parental control apps: #edtechchat #Parenthood https://t.co/qMk6rg84og pic.twitter.com/xwnZhHEzK3
As a parent of a 8 and 10 year old using OurPact to successfully manage my kids access to screen and apps on iPads for the last couple years, android devices will be making a showing in our house in the near future. https://t.co/Pn3RJoCgFv
— Hunter Wagner (@hunterawagner) April 27, 2019
Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction https://t.co/oU6PuPMLPE
— Arnaud Castaignet (@arnocast) April 28, 2019
Here's an example of why I thing we need so desperately need techier coverage of tech.
— Aron Pilhofer (@pilhofer) April 28, 2019
The story here might be exactly what the NYT says: a consumer-oriented piece about Apple bigfooting an industry.https://t.co/P1eW04Nvrq
It still amazes me that people chose to use a platform that is absolutely proprietary. https://t.co/ExdPM894KB
— Mathieu Comandon (@strycore) April 28, 2019
“By controlling the iPhone App Store, where companies find some of their most lucrative customers, Apple has unusual power over the fortunes of other corporations” https://t.co/oj4ORfi7Fc pic.twitter.com/Tsr7fGCvQI
— David Beard (@dabeard) April 28, 2019
We are witnessing the war over our attention & health, changing memes and brands over the last century.
— Canay Atalay (@canayatalay) April 28, 2019
We are on a mission to end “dopamine addiction economy” with children by spreading consciousness @wechildrenfirst https://t.co/tvEFQOjVQn
Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction
— Culttture (@culttture) April 28, 2019
Over the past year, Apple has removed or restricted at least 11 of the 17 most downloaded screen-time and parental-control apps.https://t.co/1EoaZl2sYv
These tools have existed in the App Store for years. Isn’t it funny that Apple began purging them only after it introduced similar services of its own? https://t.co/G0qDhKk6CW via @nytimes
— Scott Monty (@ScottMonty) April 27, 2019
Come on Apple! This is shameful. Even if there are good reasons for shutting down certain apps, like security holes, you need to do a better job of prioritizing tools that help users and parents control screen time. https://t.co/X6sDif0L7h
— Nir Eyal (@nireyal) April 27, 2019
WOW —-> Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction via @NYTimes https://t.co/6ziVuV731c
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) April 27, 2019
Periodic reminder that if your business depends on apps you're basically serf to a behemoth with unpredictable mood swings.
— Robin Berjon (@robinberjon) April 28, 2019
"Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addiction" https://t.co/90XLmifTNc
There's no conscience in Silicon Valley. Anywhere.
— Gari Cruze (@garicruze) April 28, 2019
Apple Cracks Down on Apps That Fight iPhone Addictionhttps://t.co/PfHGZ1j2SP
Phil Schiller氏、一部のサードパーティ製ペアレンタルコントロールアプリをApp Storeから削除した理由を説明 https://t.co/RLs6nEVDJV pic.twitter.com/a8T8dilKMf
— MACお宝鑑定団 (@idanbo) April 28, 2019